In 1615 C.E., a former soldier with a crippled hand and a history of debt and imprisonment handed the world something it had never quite seen before: a book about a man who reads too many books and loses his mind to them. The second part of Don Quixote completed what the 1605 C.E. first part had begun — a new kind of storytelling so elastic, so self-aware, and so alive with human contradiction that every novel written since exists, in some measure, in its shadow.
Key facts
- Don Quixote: Miguel de Cervantes published Part I in 1605 C.E. and Part II in 1615 C.E., completing a work now widely regarded by scholars and writers as the first great novel in the Western tradition.
- Modern novel: The book broke from the prose romances that preceded it by embedding self-consciousness into its structure — characters who know they are being read about, an author who questions his own reliability, and a plot that bends under the weight of its own irony.
- Literary influence: Dickens, Flaubert, Melville, Kafka, Proust, and Joyce all drew directly on Cervantes’s narrative procedures, making Don Quixote arguably the most generative single text in the history of fiction.
Who was Cervantes?
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra was born in 1547 C.E. in Alcalá de Henares, Spain. He was not a man of privilege. He fought at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571 C.E., where a gunshot wound permanently disabled his left hand. On his way home, he was captured by Ottoman corsairs and spent five years as a slave in Algiers before being ransomed. He returned to Spain to find poverty, bureaucratic work, and repeated brushes with imprisonment.
He had tried writing plays. They failed. He was, by many accounts, a man the literary world of his era had largely passed by. He was nearly 60 years old when Part I of Don Quixote appeared.
What he produced, out of that life, was something that could only have come from someone who understood failure, fantasy, and the gap between what we imagine and what the world actually offers us.
What the book does that no book had done before
The premise is simple enough: a middle-aged nobleman from La Mancha reads so many chivalric romances that he loses his sense of reality, renames himself Don Quixote de la Mancha, recruits a local peasant named Sancho Panza as his squire, and sets out to right the wrongs of the world as a knight errant. Windmills become giants. Inns become castles. A basin becomes a legendary helmet.
But Cervantes does something extraordinary with this premise. He doesn’t simply mock his hero. He loves him — and the love is complicated and honest. Don Quixote is deluded, yes. He is also brave, generous, and committed to justice with a totality that shames the sane world around him. The book holds both of these things at once without resolving them, and that doubleness is what makes it modern.
As literary critic Harold Bloom observed in the Guardian, Don Quixote “sees what we see, yet he sees something else also, a possible glory that he desires to appropriate or at least share.” That is not the posture of a satirist. It is the posture of a novelist — someone who holds the real and the imagined in suspension and trusts the reader to sit with the tension.
The book also invented something structurally new. In Part II, characters have already read Part I. They know who Don Quixote is. They manipulate him based on that knowledge. The novel becomes aware of itself as a novel — a move so radical that it would not be fully repeated until the 20th century.
Lasting impact
The downstream effects of Don Quixote are almost impossible to overstate. Herman Melville folded Don Quixote and Hamlet into Captain Ahab. Gustave Flaubert’s Emma Bovary is, in a direct sense, a feminine Don Quixote — a person destroyed by the novels she has read. Franz Kafka wrote a short parable in which Sancho Panza, by writing enough adventure stories, conjures Don Quixote into existence and sends him off to be mad so that Sancho himself can go free — a reading that says everything about how later writers received the book.
The friendship between knight and squire is itself a literary landmark. In most literature before Cervantes, social unequals don’t genuinely listen to each other. Don Quixote and Sancho do. They argue, teach each other, and change through the exchange. Bloom called it “the greatest friendship in literary representation.” It modeled something new: that dialogue — real dialogue, not debate — could be the engine of a narrative.
In 2002 C.E., the Nobel Institute asked 100 leading authors from 54 countries to name the greatest work of fiction ever written. Don Quixote came first, ahead of every other book in any language.
The novel also arrived at a specific historical moment — a Spain in decline, an empire beginning its long contraction — and it drew that atmosphere into itself. The sadness underneath the comedy is not incidental. It is the book’s depth charge.
Blindspots and limits
The claim that Don Quixote is the “first modern novel” is a matter of ongoing scholarly debate. The Tale of Genji, written by Murasaki Shikibu in 11th-century C.E. Japan, has strong claims to the title — and earlier prose fiction traditions in Arabic, Persian, and Chinese literature complicate any simple Western origin story for the novel as a form. Cervantes worked within and against a specifically European tradition of chivalric romance, and what he invented is more precisely a rupture within that tradition than a universal beginning.
The book also contains extended episodes of cruelty — physical abuse in Part I, psychological torment in Part II — that are often softened in popular memory. Vladimir Nabokov, in his posthumously published lectures on the novel, called it “one of the most bitter and barbarous books ever penned.” That is part of what makes it honest.
Read more
For more on this story, see: The Guardian — Harold Bloom on Don Quixote
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Indigenous land rights recognized for 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the early modern era
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
- 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
- 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
- ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.
More Good News
-

Renewables hit 49% of global power capacity for the first time
Renewable energy capacity crossed a landmark threshold in 2025, with global installed power surpassing 5,100 gigawatts and representing 49% of all capacity worldwide for the first time in history. The International Renewable Energy Agency reported a single-year addition of 692 gigawatts, led overwhelmingly by solar power, which alone accounted for 75% of new renewable installations. Clean energy now represents 85.6% of all new power capacity added globally, signaling that the transition has moved from aspiration to economic reality. The milestone carries implications beyond climate — nations with strong renewable bases demonstrated measurably greater energy security amid ongoing geopolitical instability.
-

Global suicide rate has dropped nearly 40% since the 1990s
Global suicide rates have dropped nearly 40% since the early 1990s, falling from roughly 15 deaths per 100,000 people to around nine — one of modern public health’s most significant and underreported victories. This decline was driven by expanded mental health services, crisis intervention programs, and proven strategies like restricting access to lethal means. The progress spans dozens of countries, with especially sharp declines in East Asia and Europe. Critically, this trend demonstrates that suicide is preventable at a population level — making the case for sustained investment in mental health infrastructure worldwide.
-

Rhinos return to Uganda’s wild after 43 years of absence
Uganda rhino reintroduction marks a historic milestone: wild rhinoceroses are roaming Ugandan soil for the first time in over 40 years. In 2026, rhinos bred at Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary were released into Kidepo Valley National Park, ending an absence caused entirely by poaching and political collapse during the Idi Amin era. The release represents decades of careful breeding, conservation funding, and community engagement. For local communities, conservationists, and a watching world, it proves that deliberate, sustained human effort can reverse even the most painful wildlife losses.

