Loved all the pompous philosophical digressions, and Jean Valjean stumbling through the sewers. I remember the impact of some scenes being lessened by my brain's insistence to picture every street urchin as Pip from South Park.
― Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 17 January 2009 12:03 (fifteen years ago) link
Tried to read it at thirteen (musical fan) (oh god); failed.
― thomp, Saturday, 17 January 2009 13:29 (fifteen years ago) link
You know, the musical isn't bad.
― roxymuzak, Saturday, 17 January 2009 21:23 (fifteen years ago) link
i think this is the one i used to listen to to pump myself up:
there might have been, like, a more military one, though? i'm scared to spend more than five minutes looking.
― thomp, Saturday, 17 January 2009 23:15 (fifteen years ago) link
Recently updated:
― Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 17 January 2009 23:25 (fifteen years ago) link
I can't see whatever's supposed to be there, but the more military one is maybe "Look Down"?
― roxymuzak, Saturday, 17 January 2009 23:29 (fifteen years ago) link
i'm about to spend 100 hours on a bus, think i can get through a big enough chunk of the book for it to be worth my while? any words of encouragement/discouragement?
― samosa gibreel, Tuesday, 10 March 2009 03:10 (fifteen years ago) link
just let it flow dude
― roxymuzak, Saturday, 14 March 2009 17:55 (fifteen years ago) link
okay there are way too many pompous philosophical digressions in this novel. the story and characters are awesome but i got bored of the narrator after a few hundred pages.
― samosa gibreel, Friday, 27 March 2009 03:25 (fifteen years ago) link
I love the pompous philosophical digressions! They're prettty quaint now, but they hit home how the role of the writer in society back then was so different.
― Daniel_Rf, Friday, 27 March 2009 09:45 (fifteen years ago) link
agh i just found he squeezed every idea so dry, as if he was trying to get you to revel in the awesome wisdom of his words. i'm not saying it didn't work, but it's a chore reading something so passionately written.
― samosa gibreel, Monday, 6 April 2009 23:27 (fourteen years ago) link
UK archivist says uncovers real-life Quasimodo
― Un peu d'Eire, ça fait toujours Dublin (Michael White), Thursday, 19 August 2010 17:51 (thirteen years ago) link
Shame Julia Rose couldn't convince Vintage to let her translate the title as "Poor Bastards", heh.
― etc, Saturday, 12 April 2014 02:52 (nine years ago) link
Really good artist and he never made his work publichttps://benedante.blogspot.com/2016/06/victor-hugos-drawings.html
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 27 August 2017 14:22 (six years ago) link
Those are cool!
― Daniel_Rf, Sunday, 27 August 2017 17:16 (six years ago) link
yeah, they are. thanks for sharing that, i had no idea. i like this one:
https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-WAp3DZoQnIY/V25_prlcETI/AAAAAAAA7ko/xNLF2PYVuGcXG1A--kO-or16OXgQj9kTwCLcB/s1600/Le_phare-_par_Victor_Hugo.jpg
― Karl Malone, Sunday, 27 August 2017 17:25 (six years ago) link
> Shame Julia Rose couldn't convince Vintage to let her translate the title as "Poor Bastards", heh.
Am reading the new penguin classics translation where they have translated the title - The Wretched - which has probably confused a lot of people. (Cover does use the French name in small underneath tbf). (It's £2 as an ebook on Amazon, but has 64 pages of TOC due to the way the footnotes are done, crazy. Free on Project Gutenberg in a much older translation, of course)
Just started volume 2, Cosette. Was Hugo paid by the word?
Also, people seem annoyed at the modern language in the Rose version, greasy spoon etc.
― koogs, Sunday, 11 March 2018 14:49 (six years ago) link
New woodcut cover is nice too, with the red. Kindle version not so good as the red and black are too similar when converted to get. I had to tweak mine a bit (split it into volumes as well, and fixed the toc, using calibre, because that 1840 page count scared me a bit)
― koogs, Sunday, 11 March 2018 14:55 (six years ago) link
19 chapters of the Battle of Waterloo and a couple of paragraphs on the end to explain a hotel sign mentioned in passing 300 pages earlier...
― koogs, Thursday, 15 March 2018 19:28 (six years ago) link
finished this.
can't help but wonder what happened to the two youngest kids, the ones that spent a night in the elephant and were last seen stealing bread from a swan.
― koogs, Thursday, 3 May 2018 20:55 (five years ago) link
Since then I've read Toilers of the Sea, which was a page turner, the stranded ship bit.
And I've just finished The Man Who Laughs which could've been a novella rather than 600 pages. Based, at the beginning, in places we holidayed as kids, Portland Bill etc, so that was good.
― koogs, Tuesday, 3 November 2020 19:50 (three years ago) link