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Les Miserables read-a-long 2026 | Première Partie (1)

907 replies

AgualusasL0ver · 30/12/2025 10:54

Welcome to the first thread of the Les Miserables Read-a-long.

I'll be using the Christine Donougher translation for posting in the main, but it doesn't matter which translation you have, they seem to follow the same breakdown. I have not seen the film, the musical, and have very little knowledge about the book, but suspect I will be doing all of these Christmas 2026.

The only rules
The plan is to read ONE chapter a day and contribute/follow the thread as you see fit. There are c. 365 chapters, so we plan to take the year to read slowly and really get under the skin. Sometimes we have clustered chapters in past read-a-longs, and people do sometimes read ahead. All fine - but No spoilers until the relevant day.

Notes from previous read-a-longs

  • How you manage one a day is entirely up to you, some people prefer to store them and read all the chapters for the week at once, some read each day.
  • Sometimes these books can go off on a tangent all their own (looking at Mr Tolstoy), stick with it :-)
  • All formats and translations welcome. Sometimes the translation discussions are some of the most interesting conversations.
  • You WILL get behind at some point, but don't worry, just catch up when you can.
  • Tangents, things you discovered down a rabbit hole, articles, pod casts, clips of epic scenes when we get to them all very welcome on the thread.

Spoiler free summary , courtesy of Chat GPT below. Schmoop has book summaries so I will post those at the relevant points.

**

Les Misérables is a classic novel by Victor Hugo that explores justice, compassion, and the struggle for dignity in 19th-century France.
At its core, the book follows the lives of several interconnected characters from different social classes as they navigate poverty, law, love, and moral choice. Rather than focusing on a single hero or plotline, the novel paints a wide picture of society—showing how personal decisions are shaped by systems like the legal system, economic inequality, and social expectations.
Key themes include:

  • Justice vs. mercy — how laws affect people differently, and whether strict punishment leads to fairness
  • Redemption and moral growth — the possibility of change, even after hardship
  • Poverty and inequality — the daily realities of people living on the margins
  • Love and sacrifice — care for others as a powerful force for good
  • Social responsibility — how individual actions impact the wider community

The novel is known for:

  • Deep character development
  • Emotional intensity
  • Philosophical reflections on society and humanity
  • Detailed descriptions of history and everyday life

Overall, Les Misérables is less about a single storyline and more about asking big questions:
What does it mean to be a good person? How should society treat its most vulnerable? And can compassion change lives?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
23
Luckyforsome23 · 13/01/2026 18:19

Hello, I have been lurking and reading along. I really enjoyed the chapter today. It was lovely to listen to as I fought my way through rush hour on the tube. Sort of like a meditation.

Has anyone who has researched the history of this period got any good suggestions for websites to read? I couldn’t follow some of the previous chapters that seemed to assume knowledge of the events of this period. Otherwise I will just try wikipedia!

Onceuponatimethen · 13/01/2026 18:22

@Neitherherenorthere i think your beacon idea is very well put.

Waawo · 13/01/2026 19:09

@Neitherherenorthere all good points. And it occurred to me that this method of reading perhaps exacerbates the “slow” feeling - have been living with the Bishop for almost two weeks now; in normal reading mode it would have been an evening.

Benvenuto · 13/01/2026 21:43

@Waawo- I enjoyed the earlier chapters more because the Bishop was more active. The last few I’ve enjoyed not quite as much because it was more Hugo lecturing to us.

That said, this is partly my fault for falling a chapter behind a few days ago (thankfully I’ve caught up now) & there are still some fantastic phrases such as when Hugo describes how more influential vicars have their sidekicks & hangers-on:

Tout évêque un peu influent à près de lui sa patrouille de chérubins séminaristes, qui fait la ronde et maintient le bon ordre dans le palais épiscopal, et qui monte la garde du sourire de monseigneur.

[All bishops with even a little influence, have close to them a patrol of cherub-like students, who do the rounds and keep the bishop’s palace in order, and who form a guard around his excellency’s smile.]

My DS also told me off for giggling at the words les prêtres blanc-becs - Collins is giving me greenhorn as a translation, but bec means a beak, so I was imagining all the junior priests fussing around the bishops like birds.

@Luckyforsome23- I can’t help with a history website, but the Château de Fontainebleau near Paris has some of its rooms decorated in the style of Napoleon’s empire including his only surviving throne room and there are some pictures of the rooms on its website if you hunt for them.

Morebooktime · 14/01/2026 10:40

I have finished Book 1 this morning, and want to thank you all for your incredibly smart and enlightening commentary. I have been reading daily and so many aspects would have passed me by otherwise. I don’t speak French, have very little knowledge of the revolution and history of France, and didn’t really know what to expect from the book other than having seen the musical many years ago. I just like to read and liked the sound of reading a book over a year!

My take on this section has been of the bishop being a genuinely good and decent man, if a little naive, who is just quietly going about his life trying to help others as much as he can. I imagine this would stand in contrast to religious figures that were familiar to those reading Hugo at the time. I suppose it was a little repetitive, but also felt very drawn out by reading it over 2 weeks. I would have read this section in one sitting ‘normally’. However it did mean I spent more time considering the points made and also learning a little more about the world being depicted. This is exactly what I hoped for!

I am looking forward to exploring a new character now, and enjoying this all very much!

Piggywaspushed · 14/01/2026 16:26

Hmmmm.... I am not sold on this book thus far (and I have done other chapter by chapter ones - eg when we did Anna Karenina). It feels a slog.

My main feeling is awe that anyone ever changed all of this into a gripping musical/film/TV adaptation.

Pashazade · 14/01/2026 16:31

I suspect editing the book for the musical was quite easy because you could excise entire sections, like all of part 1, if you just focused on plot! I’m finding it intriguing, it’s well written if a little tedious in some ways, but that may be my issue as a reader as much as Hugo’s writing style/desire to illustrate this world in small detail rather than broad strokes. I skipped the entire Council of Elrond section in Lord of the Rings because I couldn’t face it!

Getching99 · 14/01/2026 17:11

Just wait until you get to the 12,000 odd words on the history of the Paris sewer system and Hugo’s thoughts on sanitation as a social issue. It’s a great book but Hugo is not concise!

CornishLizard · 14/01/2026 19:48

😂looking forward to that!

has anyone been to the musée des égouts?

Neitherherenorthere · 14/01/2026 20:13

@CornishLizard No I haven’t, but I read your post and wondered if they had a gift shop, what would it sell? After a quick google I’m amused to find you can buy a soft toy rat as a souvenir!

No online gift shop that I can find though 🤣 So no more stock is listed 🤣

I’m also interested to hear about people’s trips to les égouts! 😊

Neitherherenorthere · 14/01/2026 20:35

So Bienvenu… Priest who conforms to the Age of Enlightenment’s ideals. All round good guy who wants us to love our fellow man.

Will he be tested?
Will he be right in his beliefs?
Will we ever find out what happened to him during the revolution?
Will he contrast sharply with other characters or can anyone else match him for « goodness »
Will it become clearer why Hugo felt it necessary to devote 14 chapters to his character?

One more thought on Baptistine… If she is as soft and loving in character as the Bishop (sensitive, emotional, lover of beauty) and always adored her brother and they were from a close knit loving religious family… could she just have been unable to form attachments outside of the family unit and have been happy to be the maiden aunt kind of figure? Or even have been frightened of men/sex- given how virginal Hugo has painted her? Almost separate to her own body. Translucent.

I have enjoyed her character and Hugo did give her her own chapter!! I don’t want her to be just a plot device!!

MotherOfCatBoy · 15/01/2026 07:01

Neitherherenorthere · 14/01/2026 20:13

@CornishLizard No I haven’t, but I read your post and wondered if they had a gift shop, what would it sell? After a quick google I’m amused to find you can buy a soft toy rat as a souvenir!

No online gift shop that I can find though 🤣 So no more stock is listed 🤣

I’m also interested to hear about people’s trips to les égouts! 😊

Oh I do hope they have done a deal with Disney for Ratatouille merch!

Pashazade · 15/01/2026 17:11

So we finally meet Jean Val Jean, I feel quite sorry for him at this juncture, but I’m being honest here, I’m not sure I would welcome someone known to have been a convicted prisoner who’s been doing hard labour. However I’m surprised that he was turned away from both inns, I understand the normal house. It’s interesting how high the judgement is, there is zero compassion, I was surprised that making money off him didn’t win out with the innkeepers.

SanFranBear · 15/01/2026 18:31

Will it become clearer why Hugo felt it necessary to devote 14 chapters to his character? 😁

I am enjoying the pace of this but I really like this type of book... feel like I really know the Bishop so when (if?) he rocks up in a later chapter, it will feel like greeting an old friend...

Looking forward to getting into the next section tonight as it sounds a lot more gritty - The Outcast!

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 15/01/2026 18:42

Finally something happens! In fact, more happened in today's chapter than the whole of Book 1 😄

From the beginning of the chapter, Boulevard Gassendi is the main shopping street in Digne, lined with trees and leading to the big town square. Napoléon really did travel that route north in 1815 (it's known as the Route Napoléon - it gets a mention in the Count of Monte Cristo too!). And the Trois Dauphins in Grenoble was a real inn, apparently now called the Auberge Napoléon (see the link) - I must have walked past it without noticing it plenty of times!

www.grenoble-patrimoine.fr/element/139/595-auberge-des-trois-dauphins-actuelle-auberge-napoleon.htm

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 15/01/2026 18:51

Jean Valjean's introduction is intriguing - there's clearly something very bad that he's done, but the description of him and his actions contains a lot of positives (strong, upright, polite...). Looking forward to tomorrow when he knocks on the door the kind Marquise directs him to!

Neitherherenorthere · 15/01/2026 20:12

Pashazade · 15/01/2026 17:11

So we finally meet Jean Val Jean, I feel quite sorry for him at this juncture, but I’m being honest here, I’m not sure I would welcome someone known to have been a convicted prisoner who’s been doing hard labour. However I’m surprised that he was turned away from both inns, I understand the normal house. It’s interesting how high the judgement is, there is zero compassion, I was surprised that making money off him didn’t win out with the innkeepers.

Digne is described as a little town at the beginning of the chapter. A little town where people gossip and talk. I think the innkeepers were worried about safety and reputation after confirming who this man was. The reputation of their inns would be worth more to them than one night’s bed and board?

As you say however not a single grain of compassion from anyone until Madame La Marquise de R.

Waawo · 15/01/2026 20:33

Hm, chapter 1 of Book 2 feels like a different book to be honest! The chapter structure - especially the ending, almost a cliffhanger - but also just the sense of progress through the chapter, feels much more familiar. I say almost a cliffhanger, because it's not too hard to guess what's going to happen next!

"La bona virino kuŝigis sian manon sur la brako de la viro kaj montris al li malaltan domon, je la alia flanko de la placo, apud la episkopa palaco"

[The good woman placed her hand on the man's arm and showed him a low house on the other side of the square, next to the episcopal palace]

Onceuponatimethen · 15/01/2026 21:11

Neitherherenorthere · 15/01/2026 20:12

Digne is described as a little town at the beginning of the chapter. A little town where people gossip and talk. I think the innkeepers were worried about safety and reputation after confirming who this man was. The reputation of their inns would be worth more to them than one night’s bed and board?

As you say however not a single grain of compassion from anyone until Madame La Marquise de R.

And the Marquise thinks he’s a soldier so it’s not informed compassion.

Neitherherenorthere · 15/01/2026 22:05

Onceuponatimethen · 15/01/2026 21:11

And the Marquise thinks he’s a soldier so it’s not informed compassion.

Oooh yes, that’s right 👍 Good point!

ÚlldemoShúl · 15/01/2026 22:06

Enjoyed today’s chapter. Feels like it’s starting to get going.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 15/01/2026 22:16

I liked the introduction, all fourteen chapters about Bishop Bienvenue.
It's good now, though, to change pace and move onto Jean Valjean.

He wasn't honest with the Marquise. He said he hadn't money for the inn and he took her four sous. I felt sorry for him that he was turned away. I must look up what a 'cabaret' is in the English version. Some sort of smaller Inn, I'm guessing, and not a stage show :)

Edit: cabaret=tavern

MissisBee · 15/01/2026 22:22

The second establishment was called a pub in my translation (Hapgood). Cabaret sounds much more fun!

Neitherherenorthere · 15/01/2026 22:22

Luckyforsome23 · 13/01/2026 18:19

Hello, I have been lurking and reading along. I really enjoyed the chapter today. It was lovely to listen to as I fought my way through rush hour on the tube. Sort of like a meditation.

Has anyone who has researched the history of this period got any good suggestions for websites to read? I couldn’t follow some of the previous chapters that seemed to assume knowledge of the events of this period. Otherwise I will just try wikipedia!

@Luckyforsome23 I am still looking for more to read beyond wiki - like yourself. Also tv documentaries, films etc. Any recommendations gratefully received 🙏

I did listen to a bit of Franck Ferrand on his French podcast talking about Victor Hugo, but that wasn’t the historical context in any depth.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 15/01/2026 22:24

MissisBee · 15/01/2026 22:22

The second establishment was called a pub in my translation (Hapgood). Cabaret sounds much more fun!

Too much fun for poor tired Jean :)

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