Saturday, November 22, 2014

Book Review: Les Miserables


Les Misérables (1862)

Four Stars out of Five

Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables is surely one of the longest novels yet written, and yet quite possibly one of the most compassionate ever as well. It is regarded by many as one of the best novels ever written, and is often assigned in advanced high school literature classes.  It has been done by Hollywood as a dramatic movie and as a musical adaption from the stage. Indeed, the musical is one of the best movies I have ever seen.

It is hard for me to believe that almost any adolescent with their limited experience to the cruelties perpetrated by Man on his fellow would take the same message away from this novel that a more aged (and perhaps more cynical) reader would take. The novel takes the form of five “volumes” each with multiple “books” and “chapters” to tell the story of Jean Val Jean. His story is a tragic rag to riches story on the surface, but more importantly is a story of his redemption. Redemption not so much from the crimes he has committed, but rather from the self-centered, self-pitying world view he carries in his early life to a more compassionate, Christian view at the end of his life.

This book is about the plagues visited upon Val Jean by society, by his personal tormentor, Javert, and by his own personal demons. In moving the plot forward (at let’s say, a very sedate pace), Hugo introduces the reader to slices of French history in the early 19th century, to that era’s customs with respect to dress and manners, to its criminal justice system and its effects on the convicted, and in painstaking detail to the practices of a particular catholic order of nuns, to the French sewer system, the battle of Waterloo and likely several other areas of French life that my mind has blanked out. To say these digressions slowed the novel without adding much to it would be something of an understatement. Some fraction of these digressions would have been useful, but M. Hugo really needed an editor.

What the book does well is describe how the nature of French society (and Hugo goes to great pains elsewhere to say all societies, not just French) has created systems to work to enrich and empower the already rich and powerful at the expense of the poor. Not a new thought for the early 21st century, but one that earned Hugo considerable disapprobation from many of his contemporaries when the book was published; perhaps more so in France than in other countries. It is enlightening and depressing both to see how unjustly the poor were treated in that early 19th century setting, and then to realize how the same forces in play then are still in play now. Perhaps, those in power these days use different tools to suppress, but their end goals remain bitterly the same: Me first.

The plot of the story tells of Val Jean’s incarceration for nearly twenty years for stealing a loaf of bread for his starving sister’s family (and for his various attempts to escape). After being released, Val Jean still in the grip of his felonious nature (one surely created and added to while incarcerated) has a life changing meeting with a local bishop of unusually high empathy. He is forced to confront his demons, his set of values, and his relationship to God and Man. It takes him while to make this step from miscreant to saint. He commits at least one more pointless act of thievery, and this time at the expense of another member of the Les Misérables. Indeed, this last act of brutish venality seems in some ways to be the needed final life lesson of those started by the bishop that propels Val Jean onto his road to salvation. He starts to use both his mind and heart to help others. He becomes wealthy and influential under the first of several assumed names. During this phase, Val Jean (now M. Madeline) meets another member of the Les Misérables that has been grievously mistreated, Fantine. He himself has even played a small unconscious role in her descent into misery. Realizing this plus employing his newfound compassion, he attempts to help Fantine and later her equally unfortunate daughter, Cosette. Following Fantine’s death, Val Jean raises Cosette to adulthood in Paris. During these phases, Val Jean is pursued by the dogged Inspector Javert. The Javert scenes help to establish Javert’s goals and narrow vision for society; he is a better model for one of society’s well trained dogs. He thinks he thinks, but in reality, he only reacts in a manner taught to him by his masters. There is precious little humanity left in Javert. However, it should be noted, he too is one of the Les Misérables; just a well-trained and well fed one.

In time, Val Jean must make a decision for Cosette’s happiness that comes at the cost of his own. In fact, Val Jean had to some degree been living a problem-free life since his days as M. Madeline. Yes, he had several narrow scrapes with Javert and some periods of near poverty (e.g. his time in the nunnery as a groundskeeper). But until he had to choose to let Cosette go to her lover, Marius, he really never had any real personal investment in his new life as caring and loving man; one devoted to others rather than himself. His new-found transformation to a compassionate Christian was never really tested. The testing and Marius’ own limitations lead to Val Jean’s ultimate salvation; he is truly redeemed by the book’s end. Marius and Cosette achieve a kind of new understanding and love for the finally revealed, true Jean Val Jean. Even poor Javert once forced to admit his world view was fatally flawed by the actions of Val Jean achieved a kind of cleansing transformation.  Not only is Val Jean finally and truly redeemed, but by his actions he has led to much growth in the characters of many of those near him.

However, as compelling a story as Val Jean’s story is, the real story, the real felon in this book is Society. Who will help it achieve and how will society ever achieve its redemption? When will Society or better yet Man really learn to place his neighbor’s welfare before his own? Is such a transformation, such a societal redemption even possible? Can Man and his Society at least get better if not, in fact transform? Such a question has long been asked by writers and philosophers. I sure hope so, but based on current life in the 21st Century, I can only worry for my grandchildren.


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