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Les Miserables Tome I Paperback – June 15, 2015
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length126 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJune 15, 2015
- Dimensions6 x 0.29 x 9 inches
- ISBN-10151435652X
- ISBN-13978-1514356524
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Get to know this book
What's it about?
Convict's quest for redemption amidst injustice, revolution, and moral dilemmas in 19th-century France.
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True or false, that which is said of men often occupies as important a place in their lives, and above all in their destinies, as that which they do.9,572 Kindle readers highlighted this
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M. Myriel had to undergo the fate of every newcomer in a little town, where there are many mouths which talk, and very few heads which think.8,492 Kindle readers highlighted this
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"Let us never fear robbers nor murderers. Those are dangers from without, petty dangers. Let us fear ourselves. Prejudices are the real robbers; vices are the real murderers. The great dangers lie within ourselves. What matters it what threatens our head or our purse! Let us think only of that which threatens our soul."7,049 Kindle readers highlighted this
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"The most beautiful of altars," he said, "is the soul of an unhappy creature consoled and thanking God."5,148 Kindle readers highlighted this
Product details
- Publisher : CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (June 15, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 126 pages
- ISBN-10 : 151435652X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1514356524
- Item Weight : 6.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.29 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,803,699 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #38,446 in Classic Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Victor Marie Hugo (/ˈhjuːɡoʊ/; French: [viktɔʁ maʁi yɡo]; 26 February 1802 – 22 May 1885) was a French poet, novelist, and dramatist of the Romantic movement. He is considered one of the greatest and best-known French writers. In France, Hugo's literary fame comes first from his poetry and then from his novels and his dramatic achievements. Among many volumes of poetry, Les Contemplations and La Légende des siècles stand particularly high in critical esteem. Outside France, his best-known works are the novels Les Misérables, 1862, and Notre-Dame de Paris, 1831 (known in English as The Hunchback of Notre-Dame). He also produced more than 4,000 drawings, which have since been admired for their beauty, and earned widespread respect as a campaigner for social causes such as the abolition of capital punishment.
Though a committed royalist when he was young, Hugo's views changed as the decades passed, and he became a passionate supporter of republicanism; his work touches upon most of the political and social issues and the artistic trends of his time. He is buried in the Panthéon. His legacy has been honoured in many ways, including his portrait being placed on French franc banknotes.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Étienne Carjat [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the characters well-drawn and complex. They also appreciate the philosophical thoughts and conversations that make the story three-dimensional. Readers describe the storyline as epic and wonderful. Opinions are mixed on readability, engagement, and details. Some find the writing extremely detailed and easy to handle, while others say it's not an easy read and takes a long time to get to any point. Reader also mention that the book is captivating at first, but can be boring and difficult to stay focused on.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the storyline epic, engaging, and emotional. They also appreciate the gripping narrative and redemptive theme. Readers also mention that the historical aspect is interesting and shows the beautiful nature of misery.
"...to all of these characters as Hugo spins an incredibly complex and overlapping tale, with dramatic ironies aplenty, reversals galore, tragic romances..." Read more
"...But it is so much more. It's a story of the redemption of man, despite everything the world can throw at him...." Read more
"...watching, and listening to because it challenges the mind, touches the heart and exercises the soul." Read more
"...This emotionally-powerful story of Valjean, Javert, Fantine, and Cosette has the power to change your life...." Read more
Customers find the book has philosophical thoughts and conversations that keep them thinking between reads. They say it inspires them to be a better person, with wonderful multidimensional viewpoints. Readers also say the plot is good and the social justice themes are important. They mention the descriptions are interspersed very artfully with the main theme of the book, the life and times, and the balance of good and evil. They also say that the table of contents is comprehensive, but does not include a link to every minor chapter.
"...Hugo spins an incredibly complex and overlapping tale, with dramatic ironies aplenty, reversals galore, tragic romances, bittersweet ends, moral..." Read more
"...I forgive Hugo because the plot is so good and the social justice themes so important and - well, he is Victor Hugo! -..." Read more
"...It is a lesson on critical thinking!" Read more
"...is likely worthy of five stars apart from the lengthy commentaries and historical accuracies that force the sometimes plural, sometimes singular..." Read more
Customers find the characters well drawn, complex, and likable. They also say the plot develops fast.
"...The characters are so completely flesh and bone that you know them...." Read more
"Absolutely loved the story, the profound world, & the intricacies of all characters — good & evil...." Read more
"Jean Valjean is one of the most complex, haunted, compelling characters one encounters in literature...." Read more
"...Character development is completely thorough, and probably overly so...." Read more
Customers find the music wonderful, with great singing by the actors. They also say it's a good rendition of a great French classic.
"...I'm familiar with the beautiful, soul searching music, the passion of the story, and the relentless pursuit of blind justice...." Read more
"...I had seen the movie and thought it was boring - the music is beautiful, but the story was chopped off...." Read more
"...The music is some of the best that contemporary Broadway has to offer. Be prepared to one or more melodies stuck in your heard for some time...." Read more
"...No, that isn't strong enough. This book made me loathe the musical. Monsieur Bienvenu (the priest) was the first 14 chapters of the book...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character actions in the book. They mention that there is compassion, honor, passion, and nobility. They also appreciate the fantastic themes of love, sacrifice, and care for those in need. Readers also mention that the characters are good and bad, kind and cruel, humble, and gracious.
"...deep characterizations of multiple people - good and bad, kind and cruel, logical and arbitrary...." Read more
"...Full of love, sacrifice, suffering, redemption, and the suspense of several pursuits, narrow escapes, and revolution in the streets of Paris, the..." Read more
"...Fantastic themes, of love, of sacrifice, and of care for those in distress." Read more
"...it is interminably long, the writing is majestic and the compassion for human frailty is just as evident as throughout the remainder of the book --..." Read more
Customers are mixed about the readability. Some mention that the writing is extremely detailed and the author paints a complex mosaic of France. They also say the translation is very good, the Kindle version is well formatted, and easy to navigate. However, others say that it's not an easy read, very wordy, and tedious.
"I know it's scary. It's probably one of the longest and hardest to read books you've ever picked up (or at least it was for me)...." Read more
"...as years continue, simply to take in all of the beauty, meaning, wit, writing, and grace of it all." Read more
"...For 21st Century readers, the book seems wordy, slow paced, and somewhat maudlin. Frankly, it's often dead boring...." Read more
"...Each volume is easy to handle in this way, and the story is so powerful that you won’t forget important parts during your breaks...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the engagement. Some find the book captivating and pleasant, while others say it's boring, pointless, and repetitive. They also say the book is long and depressing in parts.
"...This book is not for the faint of heart, nor the short of attention span...." Read more
"...However i have to admit that i struggled with the rest of the book...." Read more
"...for Cossette or Marius, but the Thenardiers were actually rather interesting to follow." Read more
"...These seven sections are all complete wastes of your time. I made the mistake of reading all seven of them except "Argot"...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the vocabulary. Some mention it's advanced, with an extensive use of adjectives. They say the translations are a plus, and the book is engrossing. However, some customers find the definitions of numerous words difficult to find, and some words are outdated.
"...I was impressed but its immensity and advanced vocabulary -- it would be the longest book I'd ever read...." Read more
"...Hugo has an amazing vocabulary , the descriptive passages in this book were such a joy to read...." Read more
"...the translation was as good as it might have been - far too many adjectives were repeated and I'm sure an author of this calibre would not have used..." Read more
"...The Kindle version makes it much easier to read because of the built in dictionary -- you will use it often...." Read more
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And so, with my first ever visit to Paris looming in my near future, it was time to finally read all of Victor Hugo’s tale of redemption, guilt, revolution, love, class warfare, and Paris itself - to read not only the tale of Jean Valjean, a convict turned good man, and the events of his life, but to read about Napoleon’s tactics during Waterloo, and how the Parisian sewer system arose, and what Victor Hugo thought of convents and monasteries, and the evolution of French slang, and political sidetracks…
…and let me tell you: I pretty much loved it even more, and it might be among the best books I’ve ever read.
Let’s address the plot first: you probably know the gist of the story through cultural osmosis by now - the broad strokes of Valjean’s redemption, the love story between Cosette and Marius, the barricade battle, the relentless gendarme Javert…all of it is here, and even with nearly two centuries that have passed, it all hits just as hard now as it ever has. Hugo has such a way of tapping into universal human emotion even through his complex, coincidental, sprawling tale. You might not be able to identify with Marius’s specifics, but the awkward first efforts to flirt with a girl without her father noticing are every bit as (painfully) accurate - and funny! - now as they were then. The tendency of male friends to insult each other; the way that a single mistake can loom over your life and haunt you at night; the way young people overcommit to something without fully understanding it; the way poverty can shape and warp a human being; the role guilt and shame have upon a life - while the specifics of Les Mis probably don’t apply to all of us, it is such a fundamentally human story that its universal and lasting appeal is instantly understandable and reasonable. More than that, to say that it’s all relatable is, if anything, an understatement; Hugo’s observations remain painfully trenchant and pointed, even after all of these years, whether it’s understanding the horror that comes when a man lashes out at a society without care for anyone but himself, the effects prison has on human beings, the way people judge those who have been in the court system - the reality is, Les Mis has dated far less than we wish it did, and that helps make its saga all the more effective and compelling.
It’s all helped, too, by Hugo’s rich storytelling. Yes, Marius is a bit of an idiot himbo (a fact that I think Hugo is aware of and has some fun with); yes, Cosette is pretty boring (a fact I’m not as sold on being intentional)…but move beyond that and you have some of the best characters in fictional history. Javert and Thenardier rank among the great antagonists in fiction, for entirely different reasons - with Thenardier, you have one of the great amoral criminals and deceptively simple rogues of all time; with Javert, you have the complex relationship between duty and justice, and the slow realization that those are not one and the same. Beyond them, you have the good Bishop of Diane, you have Marius’s curmudgeonly grandfather, you have the pitiful (in the literal sense of the word) Eponine, you have the inimitable Gavroche…the list goes on and on. And, of course, in the middle of it, you have Jean Valjean, a simple man who makes it his goal to redeem himself, no matter what that takes - or what it costs him.
To read Les Mis is to be introduced to all of these characters as Hugo spins an incredibly complex and overlapping tale, with dramatic ironies aplenty, reversals galore, tragic romances, bittersweet ends, moral dilemmas for the ages (Marius’s choice between Thenardier and Cosette! Javert’s choice by the end of the book! Jean Valjean’s…everything!), and a suitably epic story that feels so of its moment that it’s astonishing how much resonates today. It is, quite simply, a masterpiece, and a book that I already loved a lot.
But what, you ask, of the “fat”? Of all of Hugo’s digressions and sidetracks? We don’t really need to know the entire history of Waterloo to know what happened the night after the battle. We don’t have to know the history of the sewers to know that it’s awful and dark down there. We don’t need to understand where slang comes from to delight in Gavroche’s banter or hear the disconnect between the criminals and the “honest” citizens.
No, we don’t…and yet, all of it feels like you’re in the hands of a storyteller who just wants to tell you about everything he knows, and does it in a conversational, warm style that can’t help but draw you in along the way. Moreover, it’s a reminder of the wildly tumultuous times in which Les Mis was written - of course the book would come to reflect the unease of those times, and feel shaped by them. That’s human nature. (See how Spike Lee’s brilliant 25th Hour came to be a 9/11 film when the attacks happened a few days into filming.) To not write about the tumult of the time, of the change, of the barricades - that would be an odder omission than leaving them in. Are they too long? That’s quite possible, I suppose (I will admit that there are a couple of tangents that I struggled to care as much about as we dove deeper and deeper into lists of French historical figures that I don’t know), and I will concede that you don’t need most of them, even if they’re often fascinating (I actually thought the development of the sewers was surprisingly fascinating, and as a language nerd, the slang chapter was pretty great).
But to cut them would be to cut the Hugo-ness of the story - the paternal uncle guiding you through it all - and it would be to cut the moral fiber of the story. This is, at its core, a book about wrestling with morality and decency and the role of society in those matters, and to cut some of those would also mean that we need to cut Hugo’s musings on the reality of life among the poor, or the double standards of society as we deal with convicts, or the relationship between revolutions and government. You can cut them all and keep the story, but to leave it in adds lushness, depth, and emotional texture that otherwise just isn’t there. (For example, while the recounting of Waterloo is long, if cutting that also meant cutting the melancholy trip to the contemporary site of the battle and contemplating the loss of lives and what’s left behind after the war? Absolutely not.)
I’ve loved Les Misérables pretty much since the day I finished that first version; it is a story that hits me harder than I sometimes care to admit, that touches me deeply, that reminds me of the importance of ideals and purpose and meaning in the world, and helps me see that the fight is worth fighting. But to read the entire thing - digressions, sidetracks, long derails, excessive lists, and all - is to be swept into another time period and lead along by Hugo as he walks you through Paris, tells you how he sees the world, adds his own moral explorations and questions to it all - all while telling you one of the best stories you’ve ever heard, and filling it with some of the best characters ever created. It is, quite simply, a masterpiece, and a book that I suspect I will return to more than once as years continue, simply to take in all of the beauty, meaning, wit, writing, and grace of it all.
The scope and depth of the story is UNBELIEVABLE. The characters are so completely flesh and bone that you know them. You know who they are and exactly how they will react in a situation before it ever happens. The scenes are so masterfully laid out that you can envision every detail in your mind. And oh, believe me when I say the storytelling is breathtaking. Les Miserables is about poverty and the human condition, set against the backdrop of decades of French history. But it is so much more. It's a story of the redemption of man, despite everything the world can throw at him. It is a story of fear and sadness, but most of all, hope. The hope that we can do better. The hope that religion will not lead us down a path of self-righteousness, but to true righteousness, which to quote the book of Isaiah is "to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and break every yoke". There is so much to be learned about forgiveness, love, happiness, and life from this story.
Les Miserables is not just a book. It might be the best book ever written. It is a LIFE CHANGER. Don't be afraid of it. Experience it for yourself.
I read it because I was challenged by a nun.
My wife and I had gone to see a production of the musical version of this tale at our local outdoor theatre last summer, and we happened to sit beside a couple of kindly, older ladies. We got to talking before the performance, and found out that they were nuns, who worked at a residence for the elderly. When Sister Judy asked how I felt the musical compared with the book, I was forced to admit that although I had seen the musical (and several movie versions) MANY times, I had never read the book. "Well?" she said, "why not?"
Why not indeed.
This book is not for the faint of heart, nor the short of attention span. Hugo is subject to frequent (and LENGTHY) digressions about anything ranging from the inner workings of a 19th Century Convent, to the strategy behind the Battle of Waterloo, to the structure and history of the Parisian sewer system. For 21st Century readers, the book seems wordy, slow paced, and somewhat maudlin. Frankly, it's often dead boring. But at the book's core, all of the warmth and romance, all of the depth of characterization, all of the heartbreaking conflict of good and evil, of grace and legalism, is present and far better developed than you could ever expect to find in a 2 hour musical, or a 90 minute movie (although the 5 hour French language movie does come close- but that's a different review).
It took me about 8 months to finish Les Miserables, and you might ask whether it was worth it. That would be like asking whether a seven course French dinner is worth it. The answer is that I don't want to do it all the time, but as a special treat, its' worth it. It's worth every lengthy back story of oh-so-many minor characters, every endless digression, and every wordy philosophical speech. In the end, the story of Jean Valjean is worth reading, watching, and listening to because it challenges the mind, touches the heart and exercises the soul.
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