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

988 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:
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SanFranBear · 16/05/2026 01:32

You know when you wish you'd not read something... I'm not enjoying reading about the iron collar fixed to the wall or the box, too short to lie down but not tall enough to stand up in...

Just brings it home how history has always hated women - what the fuck do either of those have to do with faith or piety or love of God? Of all the women to be spared the hatred of society, you'd think nuns might have managed it but nope - turns out not even being 'pure' and 'devoted' would spare you from the patriarchy!

I'm probably being unfair but I'm so tired of reading and hearing about the abuse of women for no fucking reason and there we go ☹️ hundreds of years ago when it was already shit to be a woman, so so shite - cloistering yourself away was still not enough...

Pashazade · 16/05/2026 08:11

Posting this now as I’m busy rest of weekend

Book Seven cont’d…..

Mon 18th - Ch8 - Faith rules (A few more words)
Book 8 - Cemeteries Take What They Are Given
Tues 19th - Ch1 - In Which There is Discussion about How to Get into the Convent (This was the house)
Weds 20th - Ch2 - Fauchelevent Faces Difficulty (It is typical)
Thurs 21st - Ch3 - Mère Innocente (About a quarter of an hour)
Fri 22nd - Ch4 - In Which It Seems Jean Valjean Might Well Have Read Austin Castillejo (The strides of a cripple)
Sat 23rd - Ch5 - To Be Immortal It Is Not Enough to Be a Drunkard (The next day as the sun)
Sun 24th - Ch6 - Inside the Wooden Box (Who was in the coffin?)

I agree @SanFranBear, it’s depressing reading although I’ve taken it to be a monastery rather than a nunnery, perhaps I wasn’t reading closely enough. People behave very oddly when it comes to proving faith.

MotherOfCatBoy · 16/05/2026 08:57

If I’m reading it correctly at least Hugo is condemning these practices and saying they held back a whole country (Spain). He’s pointing out all the things that are ´backward’ and serve no purpose in the modern (19thC) world. So that’s something. I took his thesis here to be Yes to God and love but No to sacrificing people’s lives and potential. Not expecting him to condemn misogyny though, he wouldn’t know it if it slapped him in the face. He seems to have a more Angel in the House view of women.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 16/05/2026 09:45

Thank you Pashazade.

I also took it to mean a monastery for the torture* *chamber.

I found these chapters interesting and agreed with Hugo on his views of religious fanaticism. I liked the insider's view of Petit-Picpus, even though it made grim reading. It was fascinating.

I'm ready to leave the convent now though :)

Waawo · 17/05/2026 07:37

"The taking of the veil or the cowl is suicide repaid with eternity" - that line is going to sit with me for a while I think. Typical Hugo, in the midst of one of his dry passages and then suddenly something that just zings off the page...

Tarahumara · 17/05/2026 13:56

Yes @Waawo that is so true. I've found these chapters a bit boring but there are still sentences that stop you in your tracks.

Onceuponatimethen · 17/05/2026 20:45

I think I am in the minority in enjoying the nunnery bits!

SanFranBear · 18/05/2026 01:02

You're not alone, @Onceuponatimethen - despite my whingeing (and looks like I actually had the wrong end of the stick too!!), it's still fascinating!

I'm a bit behind as I read some of Book 8 in error but am expecting to be back with you in a few days...

TimeforaGandT · 19/05/2026 22:39

Sorry, I have been distracted. Hugo didn't hold back in the Appendix chapters - I am not sure that all convents/monasteries were as extreme as he portrays. I think there is a place for those who want to devote their lives in that way (even if we may struggle to understand it) without tipping into the torture/abuse that Hugo takes as the norm.

Very glad to be back with JVJ and Cosette!

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · Yesterday 13:28

Me too! Enjoying the interaction with Fauchelevant, and intrigued by the ending of today’s chapter - tempted to read on!

Pashazade · Yesterday 15:11

Oh lord he’s wheeled out the old physiognomy again! It’s fascinating really when we know how much nonsense it is now.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · Yesterday 17:05

I groaned when I read that line @Pashazade It was such a good passage and then that tripe.

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · Yesterday 21:03

Yeah, it is disappointing. Maybe we need to remember Fauchelevant’s philosophy from earlier in the chapter - it doesn’t matter what crimes / sins Père Madeleine may have committed because he saved a life once - and apply that to enable us to overlook Hugo’s unfortunate liking for the physiognomy stuff in favour of all his good points…not sure that entirely works for me though!

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