should i continue reading?
i've read upto part i, chapter 27 (roughly 200 pages).
Ok, i see that the author created this character Don Quixote and tried to compare him to "the one" in the New Testament.
But why are there so many long stories of some non-important random characters who come out so randomly to tell their own life stories (which, in my understanding, have nothing to do with what the author is trying to say in this book) that last at least a chapter each?? These ****ty life stories(or love stories) of random characters eventually made me to turn pages without reading, cause I didn't want to waste my time anymore.
My question to you who have finished reading this book is whether it is really worth spending more time to finish the book? If the rest of the book will be just the same as first 27 chapters, without any significant turning point or proposition, then i better quit here...
Finding oneself in Don Quixote
After having read this book in high school and in college, I still didn't "get" it. Finally, about forty years later, I ventured to read it again, with the question foremost: Why is this considered one of the top classics of world literature? (Why is it placed on the level of Dante, Shakespeare, and Goethe?) I read Sharkie's translation and after about 250 pages with no palpable answer to my question, suddenly I was entirely overwhelmed and electrified by an experience I had never before had in my life. I became embarrassingly aware of myself in the context of the entire history of my past life. I was shocked by the decisions I had made, because I had based them either on my ideal world vision, or on my realist world vision. I saw my personal choices as dependent on whichever of the two world views I was unconsciously operating under at the time I made each particular decision. This was really scary. It forced me to reexamine all the major decisions I had made. I realized how such decisions needed to be revised and corrected if necessary. This is when the book really started getting "great." I traveled through it with immense joy and realized I was seeing myself in a mirror. This book actually unveils yourself to yourself. It is a book that reads you from cover to cover.
In my own case, even after reading Don Quixote under this uncanny prism, I have remained true to all the major decisions I made in the past. Does this mean I am a coward? Seeing I am not in a position to change them at my age, especially because I am responsible to others who depend on me, I have nevertheless been able to transcend myself, that is, to see myself for what I am. From the vantage point of this new, objective little hilltop where I now sit and laugh at myself, I can continually improve my life by decisions I must make daily. I am liberated from myself! So, whatever decisions I could have made more wisely in the past, now no longer matter for the quality of life I enjoy. It's not what you do, but why you do it, and how you do it, after all, that provides the greater happiness and fulfillment. (I do not include under this heading what would be morally wrong.)
Since I have lived in Mexico for the past 32 years, I have learned enough Spanish to listen to the 37 CDs of this incredibly great work, in Castilian Spanish, unabridged, produced in Madrid. They did a real good job of it. This set is highly recommendable.