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BookDragon Blog

17 Oct / Miguel’s Brave Knight: Young Cervantes and His Dream of Don Quixote by Margarita Engle, illustrated by Raul Colón [in Shelf Awareness]

*STARRED REVIEW
Miguel de Cervantes survived his onerous childhood – his gambler father’s imprisonments, his family’s constant fleeing from debtors – by losing himself in stories. Inspired by his mother’s tales, “dazzling plays,” and “storytellers on street corners,” Miguel imagines he will someday conjure his own “adventures/ of a knight who roams toward a deep/ blue lake…/ a towering mountain…/ a glittering/ cave….” Despite his lack of books, Miguel creates a “world/ of brave/ daydreams” that sustain him through plague, famine, and disaster after disaster. His Don Quixote and “his chubby friend” will go “forth boldly… to right/ all the wrongs/ of this wonderful/ but terribly/ mixed up/ world.”

Margarita Engle (The Wild Book) and Raúl Colón (Draw!) combine their formidable strengths to create Miguel’s First Knight, an inspiring story of tenacious hope and indelible grit. Engle’s thoughtful, first-person verses give voice to “the man who dreamed Don Quixote into existence.” Artist Colón’s sweeping “pen and ink and watercolor” spreads, in a muted palette of browns, greens, and yellows, suggests a sense of long-ago history, while his characters’ expressions add immediacy: the Cervantes siblings’ joy performing their “fanciful world,” Miguel’s wide-eyed hope when he returns to school, Miguel’s mother’s beleaguered resignation over the family’s next escape.

The final page states that “Cervantes is widely regarded as the creator of the first modern novel.” Published in 1605, Don Quixote is indeed the first Western novel, but Murasaki Shikibu’s Tale of Genji debuted circa 1010. Numbers aside, what shines forth is the power of imagination to transcend hardship and injustice. As portals to creativity, Engle and Colón prove how “[s]ome daydreams really do/ come true.”

Discover: Despite a trying childhood, young Cervantes turns his imaginary adventures of a brave knight into Don Quixote, the West’s first modern novel.

Review: “Children’s & Young Adult,” Shelf Awareness, October 17, 2017

Readers: Children

Published: 2017

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Biography, Children/Picture Books, Cuban American, European, Latina/o/x, Nonfiction, Poetry, Puerto Rican, Repost Tags > BookDragon, Don Quixote, Family, Father/son relationship, Historical, Margarita Engle, Miguel de Cervantes, Miguel's Brave Knight, Parent/child relationship, Raúl Colón, Shelf Awareness
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