
Notre-Dame de Paris
by Victor Hugo
"Notre-Dame de Paris" by Victor Hugo is a French Gothic novel published in 1831. Set in 15th-century Paris, it tells the tragic story of Quasimodo, the deformed bell-ringer of Notre-Dame Cathedral, the beautiful Romani dancer Esmeralda, and the obsessed Archdeacon Claude Frollo. Their intertwined fates unfold against the backdrop of the iconic cathedral, which Hugo championed for preservation. A model of Romantic literature, the novel explores impossible love, jealousy, and the plight of society's outcasts in a tale that has become a classic of French literature.
Related Subjects
Related books
Brave Bessie Westland : $b A story of Quaker persecution
Emma Leslie
Gómez Arias Or, The Moors of the Alpujarras, A Spanish Historical Romance.
Joaquín Telesforo de Trueba y Cosío
Austin and His Friends
Frederic Henry Balfour
A mirror for witches : $b in which is reflected the life, machinations, and death of famous Doll Bilby, who, with a more than feminine perversity, preferred a demon to a mortal lover; here is also told how and why a righteous and most awfull judgement befell her, destroying both corporeal body and immortal soul
Esther Forbes
The bridge of San Luis Rey
Thornton Wilder
The Sun King
Gaston Derreaux
The brave little maid of Goldau
Mary Elizabeth Jennings
Sämtliche Werke 3-4 : $b Der Idiot
Fyodor Dostoyevsky