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Genre/Form: | Fiction |
---|---|
Additional Physical Format: | Online version: Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de, 1547-1616. Don Quixote. Newark, Del. : Cervantes & Co., ©2005 (OCoLC)648813740 |
Material Type: | Fiction |
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra; Thomas A Lathrop; Jack Davis |
ISBN: | 1589770250 9781589770256 |
OCLC Number: | 65181675 |
Description: | xxx, 864 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm. |
Series Title: | European masterpieces in translation, no. 1. |
Other Titles: | Don Quixote. |
Responsibility: | Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra ; translated and with notes by Tom Lathrop ; consulting editors, Annette Grant Cash, Victoria Richardson, James K.M. Saddler ; illustrated by Jack Davis. |
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WorldCat User Reviews (1)
An excellent book; an excellent translation
<!-- commentHeader --> <div id="brtext_41363857" class="commentText">The first thing I do when I am about to read a book that was originally written in a language I cannot read, is search various sites to discover which version is known as the best translation -- this particular item (translated...
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<!-- commentHeader --> <div id="brtext_41363857" class="commentText">The first thing I do when I am about to read a book that was originally written in a language I cannot read, is search various sites to discover which version is known as the best translation -- this particular item (translated by Lathrop) is known as one of the best.
Next is enjoying the text. While there are many incidents in this story that will evoke sadness, it drips with so much irony, humor, and wit that the melancholy is soon forgotten. If you have taken on faith what we have heard about Don Quixote and Sancho, that is, what passes as common knowledge about them, you will be surprised -- especially by Sancho. We are told that Don Quixote is a classic, and when we finally read it, we may wonder how it achieved that status, because surely most contemporary readers will have little patience for a work this lengthy that takes so many detours.
The tags "loyalty," "truth," "deception," and "values" are most appropriate.</div>
Next is enjoying the text. While there are many incidents in this story that will evoke sadness, it drips with so much irony, humor, and wit that the melancholy is soon forgotten. If you have taken on faith what we have heard about Don Quixote and Sancho, that is, what passes as common knowledge about them, you will be surprised -- especially by Sancho. We are told that Don Quixote is a classic, and when we finally read it, we may wonder how it achieved that status, because surely most contemporary readers will have little patience for a work this lengthy that takes so many detours.
The tags "loyalty," "truth," "deception," and "values" are most appropriate.</div>
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