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Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
The greatest praise a book can have: It changed my life,
By leila (lexington, ky) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Les Misérables (Paperback)
Soon after finishing this book, I heard from a slight acquaintance -- a man I had sat next to on a Greyhound bus some months before. He was a foreign national and he had a problem: he had just been offered his dream job, but could not accept it due to some problem with his visa. On hearing his tale of woe, a thought occurred to me: here's a nice guy in trouble, and I have the means to help him. As I said, I had just read Les Miserables and was in the throes of a spiritual passion to help humanity. I asked him if he wanted to marry an American and secure a green card that way. Over the phone, I could hear his jaw drop.My only intention was to do him a little favor, then leave him to his own life while I went on with mine. We lived in different cities, so it wouldn't be much of a marriage. We would get divorced in a year or two, of course. I hoped that my action would inspire him to do something nice for a stranger in the future, just as the bishop's kindness inspired Valjean to become a different man. We married at the courthouse in 1996 with no witnesses present. I tried to make it clear to him that he owed me nothing and I did not expect to hear from him except as necessary -- to sign INS documents, et cetera. I am not a religious woman, but I sometimes think that God rewarded me for the one selfless act I've performed in my life. It's five years later and I have the best husband a woman could ask for. Our daughter is three months old.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great book, but consider the abridged version,
By Anonymous (Vanessa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Les Misérables (Paperback)
Growing up in a house where Les Misérables the musical was constantly played, I decided to read the unabridged novel. I was not disappointed - the storyline is fascinating, the characters are likeable, and Hugo has some fascinating ideas. I would, however, caution the reader to first consider the abridged version. Be advised that Hugo does go off on several tangents directly unrelated to the storyline, not the least noteworthy being an intensive 40-page description of the Battle of Waterloo. His dissertation on argot, or slang of the Parisian underworld, is fascinating to a linguist but perhaps tries the patience of the reader who is reading for pleasure. Try the abridged first, and then, if you're unsatisfied, buy this.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great, with all its faults.,
This review is from: Les Misérables (Paperback)
Long-winded and eloquent, tender and cynical, passionate and sane, Victor Hugo made literature by adding to life, rather than subtracting from it. Hugo sees life from many sides. He finds good in the revolution and the monarchy, the priest and the skeptic, but also roots of evil in each. Hugo is Humanist and Christian, pious and scornful, lover and long-winded story-teller whose acquaintance one does well to cultivate on a rainy day. He is also preachy. This book is a series of sermons sandwiched between narrative. He is a poet who inflicts on his readers a maddening romantic history of the Paris sewer at a critical point in the plot. Like Dickens, his coincidences defy all plausible odds. I felt like docking Hugo a star for all these forms of "extravagence," but then decided, in the spirit of romanticism, to add an extra five and then take them away again, leaving a full complement. Only a person who has failed to grasp this book's essential greatness would discount it on account of such failings. Even the demerits of a work like this add something to its beauty, like the coloring in smoky quartz. Hugo excells in description of character, mood, and aphorism. Here are a few of the latter: "The girl who knows herself to be pretty is less likely to become a nun, the sense of vocation varying inversely with the degree of beauty." "Skepticism, that dry-rot of the intellect, had left him without a whole thought in his head." "Two riches which the rich often lack -- work, which makes a man free, and thought, which makes him worthy of freedom." "They made the fatal blunder of mistaking the discipline of the soldier for the consent of the nation. These are the delusions that destroy thrones." I took Hugo with me on a trip to China, and found him a very good traveling companion...
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