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Les Miserables read-a-long 2026 | Deuxième Partie (2)

104 replies

Pashazade · 23/05/2026 08:24

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

I've taken over from AgualusasL0ver in trying to keep us all reading together, but have copied the below over from the first thread.

I'll also be using the Christine Donougher translation (on Kindle) for posting in the main, but it doesn't matter which translation you have, they seem to follow the same breakdown.
It's a bit sprawly in places, some people have entire sections in the appendices, so I've started adding the first line of the chapter to try and lock in exactly where we are for that day, hopefully it helps us all keep together!

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:
MotherOfCatBoy · 23/06/2026 17:00

VikingNorthUtsire · 22/06/2026 22:36

You mean there aren't various hour long sections where they introduce each character, and their landlady, and someone they once met at a party, and then set it within a song about the history of Paris in "We Didn't Start The Fire" style?

I am devastated 😂

Edited

Where is the mort-de-rire button when you need it eh!

DuPainDuVinDuFromage · 24/06/2026 12:56

I’m so glad Marius has learned the truth and seems to be turning out alright despite his grandfather! Sounds like he’ll be one of the good guys.

And it’s good to be back to proper narrative again after the recent boring chapters. Some particularly good lines today, including “How can anyone be called Marius? At least your name is Théodule” 😄 I have a friend with a nephew called Marius - she wasn’t keen on the name but it could be worse 😂

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 24/06/2026 13:13

Théodule is definitely worse 😄

CutFlowers · 24/06/2026 17:03

I have caught up now - bit sad Marius never got to meet his Dad.

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