Auf ein Miniaturbild klicken, um zu Google Books zu gelangen.
Lädt ... Les Miserables (Everyman's Library) (Original 1862; 1998. Auflage)von Victor Hugo (Autor), Charles E. Wilbour (Übersetzer), Peter Washington (Einführung)
Werk-InformationenDie Elenden von Victor Hugo (1862)
Favourite Books (16) » 95 mehr 501 Must-Read Books (32) Books Read in 2016 (37) BBC Big Read (82) 19th Century (7) French Books (5) Top Five Books of 2015 (104) A Novel Cure (100) Top Five Books of 2022 (109) CCE 1000 Good Books List (172) 1,001 BYMRBYD Concensus (191) Love and Marriage (36) Europe (14) One Book, Many Authors (132) Elevenses (192) Movie Adaptations (65) Books Read in 2021 (2,227) Books Read in 2015 (1,493) Out of Copyright (71) BBC Big Read (89) Didactic Fiction (10) Overdue Podcast (213) Ambleside Books (366) Epic Fiction (40) Historical Fiction (855) 1860s (6) french letters (10) Books in Riverdale (71) Revolutions (22) 100 (16) Romans (19) Fake Top 100 Fiction (66) Books on my Kindle (103) Shelf 101 (44) Tagged 19th Century (24) infjsarah's wishlist (306) I Can't Finish This Book (129) My TBR list (12) Generation Joshua (58) Unread books (565) Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest.
Um marco do romance francês do século XIX, Os miseráveis é um livro grandioso. Narrando fatos que se estendem da derrota francesa na Batalha de Waterloo, em 1815, aos levantes antimonarquistas de junho de 1832 em Paris, Victor Hugo transcendeu as barreiras da ficção para criar uma obra que é ao mesmo tempo um drama romântico, uma epopeia, um documento histórico, um ensaio filosófico, um tratado sobre ética e um estudo sobre literatura e linguagem. Nada disso seria possível sem o fascínio exercido pelas reviravoltas de seu enredo e pelo carisma de seus personagens. Como o criminoso Jean Valjean e sua jornada desesperada em busca de redenção. Ou a explorada e prostituída Fantine e sua filha Cosette. Ou ainda o pequeno Gavroche, filho de um lar desajustado que foge de casa para viver nas ruas. Unidos pelo idealismo e pelo gênio narrativo de Victor Hugo, esses excluídos e heróis improváveis fazem de Os miseráveis um grito de liberdade que continua a ecoar até os dias de hoje. ( ) This book had been on my unread shelf for a really long time -- a decade! Out of curiosity and need for encouragement, I created a GoodReads poll asking which unread book (I named seven) should I read next, in 2024. Les Misérables received the most, with 1/3 of the votes. Staying true to the results, I began reading Les Misérables on January 1, and also discovered and joined a Les Miz read-along via Instagram. Unfortunately, I did not utilize the read-along, and quickly my expedition became a read-alone. And unlike the group, I was reading an abridged version. Given the size of the abridged, I was not about to exchange it for the unabridged. Before starting, I had limited knowledge of the plot and characters, which I had obtained over the years through various children's versions, musical theater, and the 25th Anniversary concert at the O2 Arena in London (which is awesome). Naturally, reading the abridged novel filled in missing information, connected relationships, and introduced me to countless new characters. Usually, with a tome like this, I prefer to write about my reading experience, rather than give a long review since readers have either already read it and know everything there is to know, or readers have not read it and do not want to be exposed to spoilers. This post is about how I did not fan over Les Misérables, yet, why I gave it four stars anyway. Firstly, I rated it four stars because I did value some of the background features about characters, history, and places, which demonstrated depth and thoroughness to detail. Obviously, this was an important work to Hugo, and he took great care to write this novel. Secondly, Hugo touched on all the major emotional themes of humanity: injustice, poverty, misery, compassion, sacrifice, selflessness, grace, redemption, forgiveness, love, hope, mercy, empathy, and morality. Engaged readers may find themselves cheering for particular characters and burning with retribution for others. And thirdly, a major part of Les Misérables displayed the good side of humankind, that which warms hearts and produces hope. Maybe it even inspires readers to do what is good and right. But now about why I did not fan over this novel. For one, I was not overall moved while reading this. I read through it, not lived through it. While I recognized the scope, weight, and worth of the novel, as explained above, personally, it was more of a three-star experience. As I have explained, it was excessively drawn out in places, and while I have not complained about long and drawn out works in the past, lately I no longer have a desire to peruse a long book. Does anyone else feel this way too? I say lately because this is new with me, in these last few years. When I look at the remaining tomes on my unread shelf, I know I am avoiding them, partly because I am not interested in the commitment. I only made myself read Les Miz because it was time. Unfortunately, I endured through the extensive storytelling as unimportant and grumbled as it veered off in tangents that I did not care about. Now, a second and more concerning matter is that the Christian gospel message seemed obscured. I know, I know! An author is not required to share the gospel message, but my pet peeve is when the gospel message is rescinded by or equated with doing good works. While some point to the bishop showing grace toward Jean Valjean as the moment he gave his life to Christ -- I understood this as the Bishop "bought [Valjean's] life for God," and it was not explicit that Valjean made the personal decision to get right with God because of what Christ did for him. The bishop gave Valjean a second chance, a challenge, to live for God from now on or, what appeared for the remainder of the story, to do good works indefinitely. But I do not recall a time when Valjean recognized his depravity and corruption, the pending wrath of God, his need for a Savior, then, his repentance, and finally, a turning to Christ as his Lord and Savior for what Jesus did on the cross. I was a definitely exasperated by Valjean's excessive, obsessive, bizarre behavior to continuously do good and right, to the point where he was often in mental peril and conflict; this novel felt like another one of those that placed good works on the same plane as the Christian gospel. Maybe I missed the gospel spelled out, but all I remember is Valjean's continuous striving for doing good. Of course, in the end, he wins the prize, which was obvious. But let it not be because he did good. This would be false promotion. Maybe I am being legalistic or grumpy (like Javert, the law follower). Valjean obeyed the law of Christ moreso, to love one's neighbor as himself. He sacrificed for others and put others above himself. That is not arguable. Nonetheless, I was uncomfortable to think that maybe Hugo was making him a representation of Christ because of his ongoing sacrificial works. If Hugo meant to exploit good works and overshadow the reason we need the gospel message of Christ's sacrifice, then I am struggling with the story. But if I missed the clear gospel message that we are not good and therefore need a Savior, and that our good works are not to earn salvation but out of our graciousness for what Christ did for us, then I stand corrected. And that is really all I have to say about it. I probably will never read it again. However, I will always watch the 25th Anniversary Concert at the O2 Arena, over and over again, because if nothing else, Les Misérables makes an poignant musical. * * * Les Misérables is a remarkable book significant for its well-crafted characters and moral vision that is still relevant even today. However, it's not an easy read as it is full of tangents. Even for those who frequently read 19th-century literature, Les Misérables can be quite challenging. Some chapters are composed of obscure references that may not be easily comprehensible to Les Misérables is an exceptional book known for its well-crafted characters and a moral vision that is still relevant today. However, it's not an easy read as it is full of tangents. Even for those who frequently read 19th-century literature, Les Misérables can be quite challenging. Some of the chapters contain obscure references that may not be easily understandable to modern readers. Nevertheless, these tangents are not necessarily a bad thing. Some readers may find them interesting, while others may find them dull, depending on their interests. The chapters on Waterloo and the Parisian sewer system are among the most intriguing ones. In summary, Les Misérables is a worthwhile but challenging read, filled with memorable characters and a moral vision that should be common sense.modern readers, but they are not essential to the story. Nevertheless, the tangents are not necessarily a bad thing. Some readers may find them interesting, while others may find them dull, depending on their interests. For instance, the chapters on Waterloo and the Parisian sewer system are among the most intriguing ones.Les Misérables is a good book and an important one, filled with memorable characters and a moral vision that should have (and should be) common sense. It is equally full of tangents. Les Miserable is a very worthwhile read, but it's not always an easy read. Even for those who often read 19th-century literature, Les Mis is on another level. Entire chapters composed of obscure references may be nearly incomprehensible to modern readers, but these chapters are not critical to the story. The tangents aren't necessarily bad--you'll probably like some and be bored by some depending on your interests; some people are partial to Waterloo and or the Parisian sewer system. Gehört zu VerlagsreihenAmstelboeken (138-139-140) Aufbau Taschenbuch (1700) Austral (646) Capolavori della narrativa [De Agostini] (46-47-48) — 24 mehr Ist enthalten inBeinhaltetGavroche. von Victor Hugo Ist eine Wiedererzählung vonWird wiedererzählt inHat die (nicht zu einer Reihe gehörende) FortsetzungBearbeitet/umgesetzt inThe Graphic Canon, Vol. 2: From "Kubla Khan" to the Bronte Sisters to The Picture of Dorian Gray von Russ Kick Ist gekürzt inWird parodiert inInspiriertEin Kommentar zu dem Text findet sich inHat als Erläuterung für Schüler oder StudentenHat einen LehrerleitfadenAuszeichnungenPrestigeträchtige AuswahlenBemerkenswerte Listen
Der grosse Klassiker in einer ungekürzten Lesung über 56 Stunden vom "König der Vorleser" Gert Westphal aus den Jahren 1991-1994, aufgenommen vom Südwestfunk (heute Südwestrundfunk) Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
Aktuelle DiskussionenBest Les Miserables? in Folio Society Devotees Best edition of Les Miserables? in Fine Press Forum (1 mehr) Les Miserables Translations in Easton Press Collectors Beliebte Umschlagbilder
Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)843.7Literature French and related languages French fiction Constitutional monarchy 1815–48Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
Bist das du?Werde ein LibraryThing-Autor. |