Make us homepage
Add to Favorites
FAIL (the browser should render some flash content, not this).

Main page » Tag Cervantes

Sort by: date | rating | most visited | comments | alphabetically


Cervantes in Seventeenth-Century England - The Tapestry Turned
4
 
 

Cervantes in Seventeenth-Century England - The Tapestry TurnedCervantes in Seventeenth-Century England - The Tapestry Turned

Cervantes in Seventeenth-century England garners well over a thousand English references to Cervantes and his works, thus providing the fullest and most intriguing early English picture ever made of the writings of Spain's greatest writer. Besides references to the nineteen books of Cervantes's prose available to seventeenth-century English readers (including four little-known abridgments), this new volume includes entries by such notable writers as Ben Jonson, John Fletcher, William Wycherley, Aphra Behn, Thomas Hobbes, John Dryden, and John Locke, as well as many lesser-known and anonymous writers. 
 
  More..
Tags: Cervantes, English, writers, references, England
Miguel De Cervantes (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
9
 
 

Miguel De Cervantes (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)Miguel De Cervantes (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)

Credited with having written one of the first "novels", Cerventes' masterwork Don Quixote continues to inspire and was recently released in a new translation.
 
  More..
Tags: Miguel, translation, released, Cervantes, Bloom, Critical, Miguel, Modern, Views
Cervantes's Don Quixote (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)
11
 
 

Cervantes's Don Quixote (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)Cervantes's Don Quixote (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)

Widely regarded as the world's first modern novel, and one of the funniest and most tragic books ever written, Don Quixote chronicles the famous picaresque adventures of the noble knight-errant Don Quixote de La Mancha and his faithful squire, Sancho Panza, as they travel through sixteenth-century Spain. Unless you read Spanish, you've never read Don Quixote.

New Edition (2010) added thanks to Titito

 
  More..
Tags: Quixote, sixteenthcentury, Spain, through, travel, Cervantes, Interpretations, Critical, Bloom
Melmoth the Wanderer
17
 
 
Melmoth the WandererMelmoth the Wanderer by Charles Maturin
Book Description
Part Faust, part Mephistopheles, Melmoth has made a satanic bargain for immortality. Now he wanders the earth, an outsider with an eerie, tortured existence, searching for someone who will take on his contract and release him to die a natural death.

With its erudition and wit, and its parody of arcane learned manuscripts, this Gothic masterpiece-first published in 1820-follows in the tradition of both the classics of its genre and the works of Cervantes, Swift, and Sterne. Some of its many admirers were Sir Walter Scott, Honoré de Balzac, Edgar Allan Poe, and Maturin's great nephew, Oscar Wilde.
 
 
  More..
Tags: Melmoth, Wanderer, works, Cervantes, Sterne