The Man Who Laughs (first published in 1869) is Victor Hugo's scathing
indictment of the injustice and inequality within Britain's political
system. It is the story of Gwynplaine, the two-year-old heir to a rebel
lord, who is abducted upon the orders of a vindictive monarch, and whose
face is mutilated into a permanent grisly grin, then abandoned. After
years of living in poverty, Gwynplaine is reintroduced to the
aristocratic life and resolves to become the voice of the
voiceless--whether he is heard or not. Author David Hine and artist Mark
Stafford introduce Hugo's classic to a new generation of fans in this
graphic-novel adaptation of abduction, mutilation, loss, and prejudice.