Victor Hugo-The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Spoiler Alert in this review
I am going through and I am including this in my Halloween posts about
the classics but with reluctance. Before I read this book, I assumed
that this was was horror, but on the contrary. It is a Gothic novel
filled with tragedy and pathos. ^Spoiler alert^ Every screen version, I
have ever seen, has a happy ending. Not so!
All of the main characters
die tragically in the end, and it is a very sad book. Nevertheless, as
incredibly difficult as it is to wade through, I loved it. Try not to
get discouraged, the first chapter is a minute description of the
Cathedral for pages and pages, but if you are a lover of the classics,
you know sometimes you have to slog through the verbosity (is that a
word?). The classics are tough, but this one is worth it. The book has
stuck with me for years. The concept of The Court of Miracles, a
community of handicapped people (in this case a sham to beg money), I
used in The Pride of the King. The imagery of the Gothic architecture
complete with gargoyles, the evil depraved priest, the flamboyant gypsy
Esmeralda and, of course, dear Quasimodo (who I named my parakeet after)
are timeless. Don't miss it.
All my life I have loved reading the classics and found few people who share my enthusiasm. I am looking for like-minded readers to share their thoughts about great lit in a fun setting without all the high-brow snobbery. Please contribute just because you love the classics!
Pages
- Home
- Charles Dickens
- The Brontes, Austen, Alcott, Shelley
- Wilde, Collins, Stevenson,Thackerary
- Thomas Hardy, Gaskell and Eliot, Blackmore
- Irving, Hawthorne and Poe
- Henry James, Melville and Twain
- Dumas and Hugo
- Stoker, Conrad and Cooper
- Sir Walter Scott, Swfit and Defoe
- Wharton, Steinbeck, Richter and Cather
- Misc. 20th Century Classics
I even liked the Disney version although they cleaned up the villain and made him a public servant and not a priest!
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