Julia_98 reviewed Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
Riding Beside a Man Who Refused to Accept the World as It Was
5 stars
Reading Don Quixote felt like traveling with someone who chose imagination not as an escape, but as a form of resistance. From the first pages, I sensed that this was more than a comic tale. Miguel de Cervantes builds a story where laughter and sadness exist side by side, and I felt both almost constantly. Don Quixote’s decision to become a knight after consuming too many chivalric romances struck me as absurd at first, yet I quickly felt drawn to his seriousness. He believes deeply, and that belief carries its own dignity.
As Don Quixote rides across Spain with Sancho Panza, I found myself shifting between amusement and sympathy. Sancho’s grounded logic and hunger for reward balanced Quixote’s lofty ideals, and their conversations felt like debates between realism and hope. I often laughed at their misadventures, especially the famous battles with imagined giants and false enemies. Still, beneath the …
Reading Don Quixote felt like traveling with someone who chose imagination not as an escape, but as a form of resistance. From the first pages, I sensed that this was more than a comic tale. Miguel de Cervantes builds a story where laughter and sadness exist side by side, and I felt both almost constantly. Don Quixote’s decision to become a knight after consuming too many chivalric romances struck me as absurd at first, yet I quickly felt drawn to his seriousness. He believes deeply, and that belief carries its own dignity.
As Don Quixote rides across Spain with Sancho Panza, I found myself shifting between amusement and sympathy. Sancho’s grounded logic and hunger for reward balanced Quixote’s lofty ideals, and their conversations felt like debates between realism and hope. I often laughed at their misadventures, especially the famous battles with imagined giants and false enemies. Still, beneath the humor, I felt a quiet ache. The world repeatedly punishes Quixote for seeing it differently, and I could not fully side with the world.
What moved me most was how Cervantes uses storytelling itself as a theme. The novel reflects on books, authorship, truth, and illusion with a playful intelligence. I felt aware that Cervantes was inviting me to question how narratives shape identity. Quixote is not simply mad. He is faithful to a moral code that no longer fits his time. That tension stayed with me long after I put the book down.
As the story progresses, Don Quixote becomes more human to me, not less. His defeats feel heavier, his moments of clarity more fragile. When the novel reaches its final movement, I felt a genuine sadness. His return to reason felt like a kind of death. Closing the book, I carried a sense of respect for a man who dared to imagine a better world, even when it cost him everything. Cervantes reminded me that idealism may fail, but it leaves a mark worth remembering.
