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Overview
Victor Hugo was the most important writer of the nineteenth century in France: leader of the Romantic movement; revolutionary playwright; poet; epic novelist; author of the last universally accessible masterpieces in the European tradition, among them Les Misérables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. He was also a radical political thinker and eventual exile from France; a gifted painter and architect; a visionary who conversed with Virgil, Shakespeare, and Jesus Christ; in short, a tantalizing personality who dominated and maddened his contemporaries.Editorials
Wall Street Journal
A subtle bookfull of wit and easy erudition. . .stands as the best biography of Hugo in French or English.Publishers Weekly -
Acclaimed biographer Robb (Balzac) has produced an intensely dramatic biography of Victor Hugo laced with devastating wit and irony, which brings the great Romantic author down to earth from his Olympian heights without reducing him either to a megalomaniac opportunist or to a sheer force of nature. As a National Assembly deputy, Hugo (1802-1885) led assaults on workers' barricades in the revolution of 1848, during which untold numbers of insurgents died. Three years later, as a self-proclaimed revolutionary socialist opponent of dictator Louis-Napoleon, he went into exile, first to Brussels and then to England's Channel Islands, where he completed Les Misrables, which Robb considers "the most lucid, humane, and entertaining moral diagnosis" of modern society's corrupt institutions. Returning to France in 1870, Hugo mostly occupied himself with casual sex during the Prussian siege of Paris but also turned out inspirational political poems and pleaded for convicted Communards. A conservative who espoused liberal causes, an upholder of bourgeois values with one foot in the avant-garde, Hugo was full of contradictions, and Robb plumbs the messy reality of his life, illuminating many facets of his personality scarcely known outside France. He gives us Hugo the visionary poet and painter who held sances to commune with the spirits of Shakespeare, Jesus and Socrates; Hugo the sex addict and voyeuristic dandy; Hugo the guilt-ridden father of a schizophrenic daughter; Hugo the apostle of an incoherent new world religion; and Hugo the anarchist playwright, forerunner of Brecht and Beckett. Son of a brutish, philandering Napoleonic general and an erratic mother who dragged her brood into Spanish exile, Hugo, by age 16, saw his family fall apart and a whole society destroy itself. From this wreckage, Robb suggests, he produced prescient novels about the gradual suicides of civilizations, making him a prophet of modernism. In addition to presenting an absorbing account of Hugo's life and a critical appraisal of Hugo's work, Robb enriches his entrancing biography with his own unvarnished, unrhymed, highly effective translations of Hugo's verses.Library Journal
The man who penned the epic Les Miserables (not to mention numerous other novels, plays, prose pieces, and poems) and served as an important and revolutionary voice in 19th-century France is perfectly captured in this immense and energetic biography. Robb, known for his biographies of Balzac and Mallarme, layers the details of Hugo's fascinating, and sometimes scandalous, life with discussions of his work and the dynamic political atmosphere of his day to create an exemplary portrait of a man whose vast literary contribution is approached only by the life he lived. (LJ 4/1/98)NY Times Book Review
A readable, fully documented, mercifully short (considering) biography of France's huge romantic poet, novelist and personal mythmaker.Wall Street Journal
A subtle book, full of wit and easy erudition. . .stands as the best biography of Hugo in French or English.Book Details
Published
February 1, 1998
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Pages
682
Format
Hardcover, 1998
ISBN
9780393045789