This wiki is a XML full dump clone of "Heroes Wiki", the main wiki about the Heroes saga that has been shut down permanently since June 1, 2020. The purpose of this wiki is to keep online an exhaustive and accurate database about the franchise.

Don Quixote: Difference between revisions

From Heroes Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Content deleted Content added
imported>Ryangibsonstewart
New page: {{infobox reference | image= Don Quixote.jpg | caption = | first = Upon This Rock | wikilink = Don Quixote | wikilinktitle = ''Don Quixote'' }} ''Heroes'' sometimes makes reference t...
imported>Ryangibsonstewart
the trip 1, gallery
Line 15: Line 15:


===[[Graphic Novel:The Trip, Part 1]]===
===[[Graphic Novel:The Trip, Part 1]]===
After having his [[brain]] "[[memory manipulation|scrambled]]" into "fanboy soup", [[Hiro]] [[space-time manipulation|teleports]] to [[Baudelaire]] and sees Yabey y Albert's Quixote Café, which uses Don Quixote's face as its logo. Hiro then imagines himself dressed head to toe as Don Quixote, and says that his journey would be a lot easier if [[Ando|Sancho]] were with him. Hiro quotes ''Don Quixote'', "God, who provides for all, will not desert us; especially being engaged, as we are, in his service."
{{sectstub}}

==Gallery==
<gallery>
Image:Don Quixote.jpg|[[Hiro]] shows [[Ando]] a Japanese copy of ''Don Quixote''.
Image:Yabey y Albert's Quixote Cafe.jpg|Hiro sees Yabey y Albert's Quixote Café in [[Baudelaire, FL]].
Image:The Trip, Part 1.jpg|Hiro imagines himself dressed as the man of La Mancha.
</gallery>
{{book reference}}
{{book reference}}
[[Category:Galleries]]

Revision as of 03:40, 17 January 2010

Don Quixote

First reference: Upon This Rock
"Don Quixote" on Wikipedia

Heroes sometimes makes reference to the book Don Quixote. Specifically, "Sancho Panza", a character from the book, is the name which Hiro uses to refer to Ando following Hiro's mind scrambling.

About

Written by Miguel de Cervantes, the novel is fully titled The Ingenious Hidalgo Don Quixote of La Mancha. It was published in two volumes (one in 1605 and one in 1615), and is largely considered the most influential piece of literature to come out of the Spanish Golden Age, and even the entirety of all Spanish literary works. The story centers around Alonso Quixano, a retired man who has become obsessed with books of chivalry, and believes them to be true. In time, Quixano puts such belief in the stories he reads that he appears to others to have lost his mind. In love with Dulcinea, Quixano embarks upon a number of quests, calls himself Don Quixote, and meets Sancho Panza along the way.

Upon This Rock

In the Ikebukuro district of Tokyo, Hiro tells a ramen vendor that he seeks his "first officer, Sancho Panza." Hiro, whose mind has been scrambled, explains that he requires transport to Sancho Panza, who is his sidekick. Then, Hiro comes to the aid of a woman. He returns the woman's purse saying, "Your handbag, my Dulcinea."

Graphic Novel:The Trip, Part 1

After having his brain "scrambled" into "fanboy soup", Hiro teleports to Baudelaire and sees Yabey y Albert's Quixote Café, which uses Don Quixote's face as its logo. Hiro then imagines himself dressed head to toe as Don Quixote, and says that his journey would be a lot easier if Sancho were with him. Hiro quotes Don Quixote, "God, who provides for all, will not desert us; especially being engaged, as we are, in his service."

Gallery


References to Books & Authors edit

Alice in WonderlandRay BradburyDon QuixoteThe Lord of the RingsThe Pillars of the EarthSherlock HolmesA Tale of Two Cities

Other References: References to ComicsReferences to FilmsReferences to GamesReferences to HeroesReferences to Other WorksReferences to TelevisionReferences to PeopleMiscellaneous References