Les miserables /

Hugo, Victor,

Les miserables / Victor Hugo; translated by Charles E. Wibour; introduction by Peter Washington. - xxxvii, 1432 pages ; 22 cm - Everyman's Library 239. . - Everyman's Library 239 .

Out of extreme poverty Jean Valjean steals a loaf of bread and then spends many years trying to escape his reputation as a criminal. In later years he rises socially and is a respectable member of society; but policeman Javert will not allow him to forget his past and is determined to expose him. "Tolstoy is said to have called Les Miserables the greatest novel ever written, and it exerted a powerful influence on the creation of War and Peace. At one level a detective story in which the relentless Inspector Javert obsessively pursues the escaped convict Jean Valjean, culminating in a dramatic chase through the sewers of Paris, at another level Hugo's masterpiece is a drama of crime, punishment and rehabilitation set against a panoramic description of French society in the years after Napoleon's fall from power. But this book is also about the metaphysical struggle between good and evil in the soul of every man and every community. Coloured by Hugo's distinctive philosophy, it is a plea for social justice, political enlightenment and personal charity which continues to speak with the undiminished authority more than a century after its first appearance."--Provided by publisher

9781857152395 (hbk.)


Paris (France)--Social life and customs--19th century--Fiction.
Orphans--Fiction.


France--Paris.

823 HUG / 022994