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Drums of Autumn

Drums of Autumn
Author: Diana Gabaldon
Publisher: Arrow Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £8.99
Buy New: £6.29
You Save: £2.70 (30%)



New (25) Used (16) from £1.76

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 20 reviews
Sales Rank: 11595

Media: Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 1200
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.4 x 2.3

ISBN: 0099664313
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780099664314
ASIN: 0099664313

Publication Date: July 3, 1997
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

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Similar Items:

  • Voyager
  • The Fiery Cross
  • Dragonfly in Amber
  • A Breath of Snow and Ashes
  • Cross Stitch (Outlander, US)

Customer Reviews:   Read 15 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The sex is good!   November 9, 2008
Will Hamilton (Chatham, UK)
Oh come on everyone. We only read these books because the highland sex is so entertaining. Let's hope for lots more!


3 out of 5 stars Could have been so much more   March 18, 2008
Dr Jones (UK)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

The Outlander series and I have a bit of a love/hate relationship, much like the relationship between an obsessive-compulsive eater and McDonalds - I know it's bad for me but I feel oddly compelled to keep going back. On the one hand, I admire the spirit of what it's trying to accomplish and genuinely appreciate when it gets things right, as is the case with Cross Stitch and Dragonfly in Amber. However, as my review of The Fiery Cross proved, I find myself increasingly disgruntled with their bloated length, rambling plots and unlikeable characters. Thus, it was with some trepidation that I started on this instalment.

Weighing in at a hefty 1200 pages, Drums of Autumn certainly ticks my first box of annoyance. Still, it breaks with the traditional Outlander formula in that it divides its story more or less equally between Claire and Jamie in the past, and her daughter Brianna and Roger in the 1970's. Brianna has made a disturbing discovery about her parents and resolves to journey into the past to protect them, while Roger also learns the truth and soon sets out in pursuit of Brianna, Benny Hill style. Meanwhile, Claire and Jamie have decided to make a new life for themselves in colonial America, presumably because there was nothing particularly interesting left for the author to write about in post-Culloden Scotland. God forbid they would choose to live somewhere that isn't teetering on the brink of rebellion and war.

This two-pronged approach to the story is quite effective as the contrast between the two worlds makes for interesting reading, but it also creates its share of problems. The first and most obvious of which is that neither story gets the attention it deserves - Roger and Brianna's tale feels fragmented and incomplete, while Jamie and Claire's feels more like filler than a properly developed plot arc. There's no sense of urgency or development to their side of things.

It's not all bad, though. Seeing Brianna and Roger piece together the clues about her parent's life story is interesting in a Columbo-esque kind of way, helping to remind the reader that there's actually time travel involved in this story, and that Claire hasn't just gone to some exceptionally backward and remote place - like Wales.

But the real shortcoming is in the characters themselves. Firstly, Brianna and Roger. These are easily two of the most insipid, irresponsible and incompetent characters ever portrayed in a work of fiction since Scooby Doo and Shaggy took off in the Mystery Van. Brianna is so ridiculously arrogant and reckless that it's almost a relief when she falls foul of her own hubris - as a reader, I actually enjoyed seeing her suffer as one might enjoy seeing a particularly annoying villain get his just deserts. And Roger? Well, the expression `pussy whipped' simply isn't an adequate description of such a painfully weak and indecisive character. Jamie Fraser he ain't.

Speaking of which, Jamie is about the only character who comes off well in this decidedly below-par instalment; still a tough and reliable man of action, able to toss off glib remarks like an 18th century James Bond. It's just as well, really, since Claire seems to be letting the side down of late. Back in the days of Cross Stitch and Dragonfly in Amber, she was a lively, spunky young woman who spoke her mind and refused to back down in the face of danger. But now? Well, I don't know if it's the perceived age of her character that's changed her, but the old gal just comes across like an arrogant middle-aged woman. There's a certain knowing smugness to everything she says and does that starts out as a minor irritation and eventually develops into a festering boil of real annoyance.

Some of my friends, in between bouts of alcohol abuse and self-flagellation, have described this book as `hard to put down'. I suspect they were thinking of a different book however as I found this one particularly easy to put down; it was picking it up again that was the hard part, and not just because of its atrocious size. At some points while reading, I actually found myself wanting to go off and do other things like fix a broken light switch or wash my car or bury the corpse of a double glazing salesman that's been stinking up my dining room. That's right, I was seriously tempted to do WORK rather than read this book. For something which is ostensibly designed to entertain and excite, this is not a good sign.

Still, I slogged through to the end partly because at heart I'm a petty man who doesn't like to admit defeat to a book, and partly to maintain my treasured reviewer integrity, which is sometimes the only thing that stops me from shoving a sharp pencil up my nose and headbutting the table. Having finished Drums of Autumn, conquered the forbidding peaks of The Fiery Cross and now facing the towering summit of A Breath of Snow and Ashes, I'm beginning to wish I'd taken the pencil option.



5 out of 5 stars Love her work-   February 4, 2006
Love Diane's work, she is amazing as an author. "Drums Of Autumn" is a wonderful romance. Anything she writes is well worth your time. Besides Katlyn Stewart, she is my next best author.


5 out of 5 stars The Frasers Build A New Life In America - Outstanding Drama!   February 28, 2005
Jana L. Perskie (New York, NY USA)
20 out of 21 found this review helpful

"Drums Of Autumn" is the fourth book in Diana Gabaldon's extraordinary "Outlander" series. It amazes me that Ms. Gabaldon has been able to continue to delight readers with her consistently good writing, excellent plots, superb characters and meticulous historic research for thousands of pages and four novels. "Drums Of Autumn" most certainly will not disappoint fans of the series. If you have not read the three preceding novels, I strongly urge you to do so before beginning this book. "Drums of Autumn" may be able to stand as a novel in its own right, but I think it would be too confusing to enjoy it thoroughly without having read the historic and personal drama that Ms. Gabaldon details so well in her previous books.

To label the "Outlander" series as merely historical romance fiction would be to do it a terrible injustice. This is an epic historical romance, yes...and so much more. The relationship between Claire and Jamie is one of the most caring and intimate I have ever encountered - in fiction or real life. This is a couple who are solidly committed to a life together for better or worse. Theirs is a love that truly transcends the boundaries of time.

More than twenty years before this novel begins, Claire Beauchamps Randall, vacationing in post WWII Scotland, stepped through the ancient stone circle known as Craigh na Dun - and was suddenly sucked back in time to 1743 and war-torn Scotland. It was here that she met and married her own true love, highlander James Fraser. Before the tragic battle of Culloden Moor she was forced to return to the 20th century to protect herself and her unborn daughter, abandoning Jamie in the process. Two decades later Claire made the journey back through the stones to reunite with James in the 18th century, leaving their grown daughter, Brianna, behind.

James and Claire both agreed that there was no possibility to build a life for themselves in Scotland. The clans had been forced to disband, the people were starving and living in abject poverty, most of the men were dead, crippled, imprisoned and or jobless as a result of the doomed Jacobite uprising. The Frasers along with a few friends and James' nephew, Ian, cross the Atlantic and make their way to North Carolina where Jamie's aunt has a plantation. At the same parallel time, 20th century Brianna and her beloved Scottish boyfriend Roger discover some terrifying information about Claire's and Jamie's fate. Brianna is determined to reach her parents somehow and warn them of coming events, hoping to change the future. The inevitability of these events and the frustration and inability to change the future continue to be strong themes.

This is a phenomenal novel! Ms. Gabaldon details frontier life in beautiful 18th century North Carolina so clearly and accurately that one literally feels swept back in time. Claire and James have grown tremendously as characters, as have the love and intimacy between them. New characters are introduced, as well as a marvelously vile villain. This is also Brianna's story. She becomes a woman with a woman's responsibilities in "Drums Of Autumn." I cannot recommend this book and series highly enough.
JANA


5 out of 5 stars enthralling, addictively enjoyable   March 17, 2004
susan jones (England)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I found this book one of the best of the Outlandish series I have read. The characters were all identifiable. Unfortunately, I felt that Claire had a less insignificicant part in this story than she had in the others and that possibly Brianna was being made the main subject of the adventure and of course Roger but it was still spell-binding and I found it a very enjoyable read and hopefully, am looking forward to the next book in the series.



 
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