In September 1575 I set sail for Spain with letters of commendation to the king from the Duke de Sessa and Don Juan himself. On my voyage Barbary pirates attacked and captured the ship, together my brother Rodrigo and I were sold into slavery in Algiers, the center of Christian slave traffic in the Muslim world. Before all of this happened just a couple months ago I was a soldier that was in a war, but during that war I was shot three times in the chest and once in my left hand causing it to be useless for the rest of my life but, that didn't stop me because I went to go look for other places that I could be stationed at but each one of them wouldn’t let me get in. The letters I carried from the king magnified my importance in the eyes of the pirates which had the effect of raising my ransom price and prolonging my captivity. During the time as a slave I had made a name for myself for courage and leadership among the captive community. September 1580, which was after three years after that I had gotten enslaved, I was finally freed from my chains and spent time as a civil servant and writer. After I was released I was short on money and when I returned home prices had risen and the standard of living for many particularly the middle class people. I did get a job as an aron boy for the king for a while but later on I turned my hand to the writing of drama, at this time the early dawn of the golden age for theater. My masterpiece the “Don Quixote'' has been variously interpreted as a parody of chivalric romances, an epic of heroic idealism, a commentary on the author's alienation, and a critique of Spanish imperialism. The book was so good that it was totally famous when it first came out but once the second part of the book came out it did just as well but I wasn’t allowed to get anymore money from the first one, but the money that I had gotten total did kind of help my financial problem. My strikingly modern narrative instead gives a voice to a dazzling assortment of characters with diverse beliefs and perspectives. The difference between part 1 and part 2 of the Don Quixote demonstrates the awareness of the power of the printed world. My influence resonates in the popular term quixotic and the immediately recognizable forms of the two major protagonists whose adventures reappear in theater and film. By illuminating differences in and surrounding this world, I placed in doubt the previous ways of depicting the world. My approach is continuously dubbed as dualistic since I often decided on expressing diverse modes of thought through the pairing of opposites. Opposition between idealism and realism is a leading theme in my fiction. The “Don Quixote'' is a book that was made by my hands, and which the book is considered by historians to be one of the most important books of all time, and is also often cited as the first modern novel. The character of Quixote became an archetype, and the word quixotic, which is used to mean the impractical pursuit of idealistic goals, entered common usage. The lesson of “Don Quixote'' is that there is value in all people regardless of social standing, worldview, weight age, etc. My inclusion of many different opinions constitutes a provision called heteroglossia which is multiple voices. Far from depicting illusion and reality as equal opposites, their relationship goes under many changes. My novel, with its many ideas on Spanish Literature, is an outstanding creation of worldview. One of Don Quixote's main tenets is fiction and historical truth are frequently difficult to tell apart, because both are dependent on the reader's perception.