Author:Victor Hugo
Tolstoy is said to have called Les Miserables the greatest novel ever written, and it exerted a powerful influence on the creation of War and Peace. At one level a detective story in which the relentless Inspector Javert obsessively pursues the escaped convict Jean Valjean, culminating in a dramatic chase through the sewers of Paris, at another level Hugo's masterpiece is a drama of crime, punishment and rehabilitation set against a panoramic description of French society in the years after Napoleon's fall from power. But this book is also about the metaphysical struggle between good and evil in the soul of every man and every community. Coloured by Hugo's distinctive philosophy, it is a plea for social justice, political enlightenment and personal charity which continues to speak with the undiminished authority more than a century after its first appearance.
'A clever, sexy story'
—— Marie Claire'A flamboyant, fuck-about-farce'
—— Eat Soup'Extremely badly written, hideously and unamusingly obscene'
—— A. N. Wilson , Evening Standard'This romp among the gardens of Kensington is politically incorrect in a spectacular way which makes it among the most original novels of the year'
—— Financial Times'Absolutely outrageous - a dazzling writer'
—— Jilly Cooper , The Sunday Times'This is a dirty book'
—— The Times Literary Supplement'Fine comic scenes...readers will have trouble putting Sap Rising down, even if their gorge rises'
—— Daily Express'Imagine Barbara Pym writing for Penthouse'
—— Literary Review'He writes so brilliantly'
—— Daniel Farson , Evening Standard'Extremely funny'
—— Time Out'Do not buy this book'
—— Guardian'Frightful pile of garbage'
—— New Statesman