It was one of the most popular novels of the nineteenth century and
Tolstoy called it "the greatest of all novels." Yet today Victor Hugo's
Les Misérables is neglected by readers and undervalued by critics. In
The Temptation of the Impossible, one of the world's great novelists,
Mario Vargas Llosa, helps us to appreciate the incredible ambition,
power, and beauty of Hugo's masterpiece and, in the process, presents a
humane vision of fiction as an alternative reality that can help us
imagine a different and better world.
Hugo, Vargas Llosa says, had at least two goals in Les Misérables--to
create a complete fictional world and, through it, to change the real
world. Despite the impossibility of these aims, Hugo makes them
infectious, sweeping up the reader with his energy and linguistic and
narrative skill. Les Misérables, Vargas Llosa argues, embodies a
utopian vision of literature--the idea that literature can not only give
us a supreme experience of beauty, but also make us more virtuous
citizens, and even grant us a glimpse of the "afterlife, the immortal
soul, God." If Hugo's aspiration to transform individual and social life
through literature now seems innocent, Vargas Llosa says, it is still a
powerful ideal that great novels like Les Misérables can persuade us
is true.