

In the meantime, Father Quixote decides to take a well-earned vacation. Seizing his opportunity to remove Father Quixote from the diocese, the bishop recommends him for a new post. He then realizes that the bishop is jealous about his unexpected promotion. First, Father Quixote assumes it is because no one wants to see him go. Assuming it’s a clerical error, Father Quixote goes along with the new role because it is an honor and privilege.įather Quixote tells his local bishop. The Pope has chosen to elevate Father Quixote to Monsignor for helping the Italian bishop. One morning, he receives a letter that changes his life forever. Father Quixote busies himself with his congregation he doesn’t expect to hear from the bishop again. Once the bishop is on the road again, Father Quixote drinks some wine and forgets the whole thing. They dine together before dealing with the car. Father Quixote readily offers help, inviting the bishop into his home. The bishop needs help with his car, which broke down in the village. One day, Father Quixote receives a visit from an Italian bishop. Although Father Quixote is humble and modest, and he runs his church well, the bishop, nevertheless, will do anything to get rid of him. Always looking for ways to move Father Quixote elsewhere, he doesn’t like it when the villagers give Father Quixote so much attention because it makes him susceptible to pride and vanity. This man is the bishop who oversees the larger diocese. There is one man in the village who doesn’t like Father Quixote. Monsignor Quixote doesn’t parody the source material-instead, it celebrates it. In tribute, he names his ancient, troublesome car Rocinante, after Don Quixote’s horse. He wishes he could be more like his fictional hero. He loves Don Quixote and thinks he is heroic.

Although the priest knows he can’t be related to an imaginary character, he is a good-humored man who indulges the rumors. This fictional character lived in El Toboso more than four hundred years ago, and everyone jokingly says that the priest is related to Don Quixote. He loves the book Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes because the main character shares his name. He serves as the parish priest, and he is very popular with his congregation.

The protagonist, Father Quixote, lives in El Toboso, a small, rustic town in La Mancha, Spain. Much of his work centers on Catholicism and Church teachings, although he did not identify as a Catholic novelist. He is best known for writing highbrow literature with mass appeal. Greene was a popular novelist, travel writer, playwright, and critic who enjoyed exploring major political and ethical questions. Critics praise the novel for its moral complexity and for exploring deep theological themes in a light-hearted, accessible way. Monsignor Quixote (1982), a religious novel by Graham Greene, tells the story of a humble priest who is elevated to Monsignor by the Pope himself because of a clerical error.
