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Literary FictionHistorical FictionClassics

Victor Hugo

French · b. 1802

3 books reviewed Avg rating 4.5 / 5Top rating 4.8 / 5

Victor Hugo was a French poet, novelist, and political figure whose Les Misérables is one of the longest, most ambitious, and most enduringly beloved novels ever written.

Victor Hugo spent twelve years writing Les Misérables, published in 1862 when he was sixty, and the scope of the achievement reflects that investment. The novel follows Jean Valjean — a convict transformed by an act of grace, hunted across decades by the relentless Inspector Javert — across the full landscape of nineteenth-century French society: the misery of the poor, the failure of institutions, the revolutionary upheaval of the 1832 June Rebellion, and the possibility of redemption for even the most damaged soul. It is genuinely enormous, and Hugo uses its length to pursue digressions on Parisian sewers, the Battle of Waterloo, the history of slang, and the philosophy of justice with the authority of someone who feels entitled to hold the reader’s attention indefinitely.

Modern readers often encounter Hugo through adaptations — the musical has become more famous than the novel in many countries — and the experience of the source text is genuinely different. Hugo’s prose, in the best translations (Norman Denny’s Penguin edition is reliable; Julie Rose’s is more contemporary), is muscular and rhetorical, capable of passages of overwhelming emotional force. The famous digressions that are sometimes edited from abridged versions are not padding; they build the social world that makes Valjean’s individual story meaningful.

Les Misérables is a long commitment and a genuinely demanding one. It is also, for patient readers, one of the most rewarding things in European literature: a book that believes completely in the capacity of fiction to address the largest questions about justice, mercy, and what society owes to those it has broken.

3 Books Reviewed

Les Misérables book cover

Les Misérables

by Victor Hugo

4.8

Jean Valjean, paroled after nineteen years in prison for stealing a loaf of bread, spends the rest of his life pursued by the relentless Inspector Javert while trying to become a better man. Hugo's vast novel about poverty, redemption, and the Paris barricades of 1832 is one of the most epic and emotionally overwhelming novels ever written.

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The Hunchback of Notre-Dame book cover
4.5

Quasimodo, the deformed bell-ringer of Notre-Dame, loves the Romani dancer Esmeralda, who is pursued by the archdeacon Frollo and a captain of the guard. Hugo's second great novel is the one that made him famous and established historical fiction as a serious literary form in France.

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The Man Who Laughs book cover

The Man Who Laughs

by Victor Hugo

4.1

Gwynplaine, whose mouth was surgically carved into a permanent grin as a child by a gang called the Comprachicos, grows up as a carnival performer and discovers he is an English peer. Hugo's most melodramatic novel is also his most direct examination of disfigurement, spectacle, and the face made into a mask by forces outside the self.

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