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

902 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
CutFlowers · 11/04/2026 17:07

I love the sections with JVJ in them.

lifeturnsonadime · 11/04/2026 17:11

Just checking in! I got massively behind and have read loads over the last few days and now am ahead!

I've enjoyed reading the posts going back over the last few weeks, especially the dialogue surrounding Waterloo which I otherwise would have found very boring.

There do seem to be a lot of overlaps of themes with TCOMC!!!

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 12/04/2026 13:55

I’ve just read Friday’s chapter - so atmospheric, and absolutely heartrending to read about Cosette’s terror in the woods (and her equally great fear of Mme Thénardier). On to the next two chapters to get caught up…

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 12/04/2026 14:25

And now I’m caught up! Very tempting to keep reading, it’s getting interesting and I’m looking forward to the Thénardiers hopefully getting their comeuppance soon!

AgualusasL0ver · 12/04/2026 17:03

Next week Readers.

- Monday 13 April 2026; Part 2 – Cosette; Book 3 – Accomplishment of the Promise Made to the Dead Woman; Ch. 8 – Inconveniences of Taking a Lodger

  • Tuesday 14 April 2026; Ch. 9 – Thénardier’s Masterstroke
  • Wednesday 15 April 2026; Ch. 10 – The Man in the Yellow Coat
  • Thursday 16 April 2026; Part 2 – Cosette; Book 4 – The Gorbeau Hovel; Ch. 1 – Master Gorbeau
  • Friday 17 April 2026; Ch. 2 – Two Misfortunes Make One Happiness
  • Saturday 18 April 2026; Ch. 3 – The Main Room of a Wretched House
  • Sunday 19 April 2026; Ch. 4 – An Unlucky Hunt

I am up to date with all my other reading so hope to rejoin with some views next week. Rather annoyingly I have just noticed that the chapter titles Chat GPT has used are not the same ones as in my copy. The numbers do match and some bear some resemblance, but I will correct this for next week.

OP posts:
Pashazade · 12/04/2026 17:26

Thanks @AgualusasL0ver So it looks like we meet up again in terms of chapter headings on Thursday but then it all gets a bit wayward again. Can’t tell from the chapter headings if the content matches for Fri/Sat/Sun other than the chapter numbering. So stick with the numbers and hope the content is the same, I guess!

TimeforaGandT · 12/04/2026 21:37

I think I am in the right place in the book. So pleased to be back on the main plot (and away from Waterloo).

Thought the writing about the wood at night was great for really evoking the fear felt by Cosette.
How did JVJ (as I assume it’s him) know his way across the fields etc in the dark?

Looks like a long chapter tomorrow!

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 12/04/2026 21:40

I've started the very long chapter. I'm hoping things will improve for Cosette. She needs to be rescued.

Waawo · 13/04/2026 06:41

Hm, despite only doing - I think - one chapter a day, I seem to have got a bit ahead, so looks like I have a few days off now until Thursday, to get back in sync lol

Piggywaspushed · 13/04/2026 06:51

Yes, a few of us stopped because the OP's chapters were different from ours. I read the big long on e yesterday though because I read before work and don't have time!

cassandre · 14/04/2026 17:40

Hi everyone, I've been lurking on this thread all year but have only just now managed to catch up! I've read all the posts so far and have really enjoyed them.

I don't have anything scintillating to say myself at the moment I'm afraid, but I wanted to post before I fall behind again, contrary to my best intentions 😁

All my thanks to @AgualusasL0ver for hosting the thread.

The Napoleon chapters were hard work. It was interesting to read people's comparisons of Hugo and Tolstoy (I was on the War and Peace readalong). I must say I identify more with Tolstoy and his view of history (small, random events making all the difference) than with Hugo's broader Romantic views, where he invokes destiny. Both are interesting though.

cassandre · 14/04/2026 17:55

I was a truly geeky teenager and read the whole of Les Miz in French in my teens (I kind of marvel at that now, as loads of the book must have gone over my head). It's strange to reread it again as an adult.

I also became obsessed with the original French Les Miz musical album from 1980 (!). Thanks to the internet, I just learned that after that version of the musical, the English version came out, and then there was a later French version of the musical, based on a translation of the English musical. Quite complicated. Anyway both French versions are available on Youtube and have sent me down memory lane.

The Thenardiers are a brilliantly represented couple. I was interested to see that some of the lyrics in the French musical are taken very closely from the original French text. The song is Maitre Thenardier (Master of the House in English):

Je facture les puces, les rats, les cafards
Je compte de combien leur ombre use le miroir
Avant leur départ
J'ajoute la valeur
Des mouches que leur mule a gobées dans le secteur

Basically, Thenardier is charging his guests for how many times they glance at their reflection in the mirror. Plus the fleas, rats, cockroaches, and how many flies have flown into the mouth of the mule they rode in on!

The Thenardiers are both dark and funny.

I appreciated the points about the fairytale-like nature of little Cosette in the forest! It's very Gothic as well...

Anyway there are so many great commenters on this thread, I don't know if I'll have much to add, but I wanted to jump in despite the fact that I'm over three months late! I'm reading the Folio classique edition in French, plus Donougher's translation when the French becomes too technical for me (as it did in the Napoleon chapters).

cassandre · 14/04/2026 18:02

Also, I saw the musical once in San Francisco, and once in Paris! But this was many many years ago.

I loved both events so much.

I'd forgotten that Jean Valjean went back to forced labour for awhile before rescuing Cosette, because I think in the musical he rushes straight from escaping Javert to rescuing Colette. The fact that he escapes forced labour in the novel just after risking his life to rescue someone is very on-brand, ha.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 14/04/2026 19:54

It's good to see you, cassandre! 👋
I enjoyed your comments. I must look up the musical on YouTube when we finish the book. I hadn't known about the two versions of the musical!

Neitherherenorthere · 14/04/2026 20:16

@cassandre @FuzzyCaoraDhubh Yes I didn’t know about the different musical versions either - interesting that the “English” one was translated into French. What was the original French one like @cassandre?

It’s interesting hearing everyone’s “relationship” with this novel, be it from the musicals or literature. Very impressed at the French Les Mis in your teens @cassandre 😁 I was also attempting it but I was only motivated to work hard at the love story parts 🤣

Since beginning this read-a-long I have new appreciation for Hugo’s skill as a writer.

So happy that things are looking hopeful now for Cosette.

SanFranBear · 16/04/2026 22:38

Phew... I was away a lot and had fallen behind but am back up to date again (well, with the chapter numbers, the names are a little skew-whiff!)

I am so pleased that Cosette has been freed and the horrendous Thenardiers were put in their place. I was chuffed when Jean Valjean produced the letter and then promptly schooled Monsieur about monies owing! I really, genuinely hated that couple - awful human beings! I feel for their little son now, though!

Looking forward to what comes next.. I mean, I'm sure there's more misery on the horizon 😁 but at least they've made it to Gay Paris!

MotherOfCatBoy · 17/04/2026 08:13

Yes I’ve also caught up after being away.. lovely to see JVJ and Cosette’s relationship.

I was musing that the people he has met who have made a big change in him, have in a way become subsumed in him and become him… JVJ now embodies the Bishop’s goodness, and also Fantine’s motherly love for Cosette. That process has happened twice now.

(My cynical 21st century brain is also thinking… so you could just buy a child? And a 55 year could live in the same room as an 8 year old??? How times have changed. Or perhaps, in places, they haven’t.)

EmbroideredGardener · 17/04/2026 18:52

I had some catching up to do after neglecting it for the easter holidays, and now I can't stop. I got so engrossed at lunchtime that I sat on my own and read! I'm a little agead but not 100% sure how far with the variation in some chapters and titles

Pashazade · 18/04/2026 12:35

I find it fascinating that JVJ relapsed when he went back to prison, so what was his motivation for escape, did he intend to find Cosette or was the whole finding of her coincidental?

MotherOfCatBoy · 18/04/2026 13:40

What do you mean by relapsed Pash? I saw his finding of her as very planned out - including his escape. Taking the risk and trouble to bury his money on his brief evasion of Javert before he was sent to the galleys…

TimeforaGandT · 18/04/2026 19:32

So pleased to see Cosette removed from the Thenardiers and the relationship between her and JVJ. Worried now about the caretaker and the new tenant....

My chapter headings don't seem to relate at all to AgualusasL0ver's! I have stopped at beginning of Book 5 and hope that's roughly where I am meant to be.

Pashazade · 19/04/2026 08:46

@MotherOfCatBoy the bit where Hugo says
“He had been sent back to prison, this time for good behaviour. Fresh resentments had brewed within him. Disgust and weariness overcame him once more. Even the memory of the bishop suffered what might have been a temporary eclipse….but undoubtedly that sacred memory was fading. Who knows whether Jean Valjean was on the verge of losing heart and relapsing.”
I think to me that implies he slid back, I’ve possibly got a bit lost in the time frames of it all. But the whole forest meeting was obviously not planned….to me there didn’t seem to be any plan in JVJ’s actions. But I could be misreading. (Possibly got a bit bored in the people running around burying things in the forest chapter and didn’t read it carefully!) 🙂

Pashazade · 19/04/2026 08:51

Having just read Chapter 4 it would appear that malicious old biddy’s are the driving forces in this novel. Well I’m assuming something bad is going to happen because of her. 🤷🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️ Thanks Hugo, obviously older women are not his favourite people. Well I mean less than women as a general whole.

Piggywaspushed · 19/04/2026 09:27

Can I plaintively ask what chapter we are meant to be on?

I obediently stopped (I think a lot of us did) when the OP chapters got behind us and now some are posting about chapters ahead of where I am.

Wail!

It doesn't matter at the moment too much but I am worried about any Big Events and therefore potential spoilers down the line,

I read Chapter Three today.

Pashazade · 19/04/2026 13:19

I’ve read chapter 4 today, (Kindle, Donougher) as after titles and numbers matching on Thursday I decided to stick with chapter numbers, so my chapter is
IV The Remarks of the Principal Tenant and starts “Jean Valjean took the precaution of never going out by day”.