Les Misérables
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- Internet Archive - "Les miserables"
- The Guardian - The Novel of the Century: The Extraordinary Adventure of Les Misérables – review
- Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute - Les Misérables
- Academia - Hugo's Les Misérables: A Master Piece of World Literature
- CORE - Figurative Language found in Victor Hugo's Les Miserable Novel: A Semantics Approach
What is Les Misérables about?
What are the themes in Les Misérables?
Where is Les Misérables set?
Was Les Misérables adapted into a musical?
Les Misérables, novel by Victor Hugo, published in French in 1862. It was an instant popular success and was quickly translated into several languages.
Set in the Parisian underworld and plotted like a detective story, the work follows the fortunes of the convict Jean Valjean, a victim of society who has been imprisoned for 19 years for stealing a loaf of bread. A hardened and streetwise criminal upon his release, he eventually softens and reforms, becoming a successful industrialist and mayor of a northern town. Despite this, he is haunted by an impulsive, regretted former crime and is pursued relentlessly by the police inspector Javert. Valjean eventually gives himself up for the sake of his adopted daughter, Cosette, and her husband, Marius.
Les Misérables presents a vast panorama of Parisian society and its underworld, and it contains many famous episodes and passages, among them a chapter on the Battle of Waterloo and the description of Valjean’s rescue of Marius by means of a flight through the sewers of Paris. A popular musical stage adaptation was produced in 1980.