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Diana Gabaldon

Author of Outlander

122+ Works 109,515 Members 2,833 Reviews 728 Favorited

About the Author

Diana Gabaldon was born in Flagstaff, Arizona on January 11, 1952. She has a B.S. in zoology, a M.S. in marine biology, and a Ph.D. in quantitative behavioral ecology. She has worked as a university professor and has written freelance for various magazines and companies such as Walt Disney. She show more writes the Outlander series, which was adapted into a television series. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: reading at National Book Festival By Slowking4 - Own work, GFDL 1.2, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=62180041

Series

Works by Diana Gabaldon

Outlander (1991) 23,848 copies
Dragonfly in Amber (1992) 13,635 copies
Voyager (1993) 12,005 copies
Drums of Autumn (1996) 10,926 copies
The Fiery Cross (2001) 9,830 copies
A Breath of Snow and Ashes (2005) 8,926 copies
An Echo in the Bone (2009) 6,352 copies
Written in My Own Heart's Blood (2014) 3,850 copies
The Outlandish Companion (1999) 2,081 copies
The Scottish Prisoner (2011) 1,839 copies
Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone (2021) 1,574 copies
The Space Between (2014) 466 copies
Virgins (2013) 379 copies
The Custom of the Army (2012) 322 copies
Outlander, Books 1-4 (1996) 213 copies
The Outlander Series (1990) 213 copies
Outlander, Books 1-8 (1995) 152 copies
The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2020 (2020) — Editor — 114 copies
Drums of Autumn, Part 2 (1998) 66 copies
Outlander, Books 5-8 (2015) 61 copies
Dragonfly in Amber, Part 1 (1992) 61 copies
Voyager, Part 1 (1995) 60 copies
Voyager, Part 2 (1995) 58 copies
Dragonfly in Amber, Part 2 (1992) 56 copies
Outlander, Part 1 (1999) 45 copies
The Fiery Cross, Part 2 (2002) 44 copies
The Fiery Cross, Part 1 (2002) 44 copies
An Echo in the Bone, Part 1 (2010) 40 copies
Drums of Autumn, Part 1 (1998) 39 copies
An Echo in the Bone, Part 2 (2010) 33 copies
Outlander, Part 2 (1999) 32 copies
A Fugitive Green (2018) 27 copies
Besieged (2018) 20 copies
Past Prologue (2018) 19 copies
Outlander, Books 1-6 (2003) 17 copies
Outlander, Books 1-3 (2016) 16 copies
Le Temps des rêves (2003) 12 copies
Red Ant's Head (2004) 9 copies
Humane Killer (2014) 7 copies
The Fiery Cross, Part 3 (2005) 5 copies
Matkantekijä 3 copies
The Castellan 2 copies
Hide 1 copy
Yabanci (2010) 1 copy
DIANA GABALDON 12C PPK (1999) 1 copy
Outlander, Books 5-7 (2016) 1 copy

Associated Works

Common Sense (1776) — Introduction, some editions — 5,183 copies
Legends II: New Short Novels by the Masters of Modern Fantasy (2003) — Contributor — 1,259 copies
Dangerous Women (2013) — Contributor — 1,127 copies
Warriors (2010) — Contributor — 646 copies
Down These Strange Streets (2011) — Contributor — 502 copies
No Rest for the Dead: A Serial Novel (2011) — Contributor — 407 copies
Legends II: Dragon, Sword, and King (1999) — Contributor — 338 copies
MatchUp (2017) — Contributor — 316 copies
Naked Came the Phoenix: A Serial Novel (2001) — Contributor — 305 copies
Fourteen Days: A Collaborative Novel (2022) — Contributor; Contributor — 178 copies
Phoenix Noir (2009) — Contributor — 137 copies
Excalibur (1995) — Contributor — 124 copies
Past Poisons (2005) — Contributor — 111 copies
Outlander: Season One: Volume One (2014) — Original book — 110 copies
Dangerous Women 2 (2014) — Contributor — 95 copies
Outlander: Season One: Volume Two (2015) — Original book — 92 copies
Outlander, Season 1 (2014) — Original book — 67 copies
Jane Eyre: Writer's Digest Annotated Classics (2014) — Foreword — 54 copies
The Haunted West, Volume 1 (2018) — Foreword — 2 copies

Tagged

18th century (1,284) adult (304) adventure (585) American Revolution (458) anthology (784) audio (308) audiobook (474) Diana Gabaldon (602) ebook (879) England (394) fantasy (4,173) favorites (382) fiction (7,002) Gabaldon (370) historical (2,338) historical fiction (7,096) historical romance (1,104) history (862) Jacobites (285) Jamie Fraser (284) Kindle (834) library (272) mystery (598) non-fiction (444) North Carolina (256) novel (486) Outlander (2,302) Outlander series (973) own (788) philosophy (259) politics (342) read (1,246) romance (4,821) science fiction (758) Scotland (3,800) series (1,478) short stories (628) time travel (5,973) to-read (6,568) unread (384)

Common Knowledge

Members

Discussions

An Echo in the Bone in Book talk (March 2022)
New fan of Outlander with a couple of questions... in Outlander: Gabaldon's series about Jamie and Claire (February 2011)
Well, what did you think? Spolier FREE in Outlander: Gabaldon's series about Jamie and Claire (January 2011)
Outlander Book Discussion in Hogwarts Express (January 2010)

Reviews

This installment in the series doesn't disappoint. All our favorite characters are here. I especially liked the inclusion of William and how his relationship to his birth family is growing despite his reluctance to accept them. Because so much time has passed, the cast of characters has grown ever larger so that we get snippets of plot for lots of different people. There's plenty of action and near death experiences and Claire is developing her powers. But there isn't a strong compelling central storyline.… (more)
 
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tjsjohanna | 35 other reviews | May 14, 2024 |
DNF at 50%. Mental note, follow my friend Alvaro's advice: if at 10% you are not enjoying a book, just give it up.
I have a million reasons in my head not to recommend this book but it would be unfair. I would rather put the effort in writing about a book that I have enjoyed that focusing on negative things. It's just not for me.
 
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SergioRuiz | 987 other reviews | Apr 30, 2024 |
I will say first that this book is not really what I expected, nor what I normally read. It tilted much more heavily towards romance than the historical fiction/fantasy that I tend to read. However, I found it a nice change of pace, and plan to continue reading the series. It's perfect for the Swiss train rides on which I really picked it up after only briefly starting it a month ago.

Gabaldon has an ability to write a slow paced story without making it seem dull or boring. Entire chapters devoted to life in a castle or the chapter at Lalybroch that could easily be boring ended up instead being quite interesting, and the overarching plot leaves you always wondering what will happen next. Recommended to those who are looking for a long series to jump in to, and who like to read tales, wherever they lead.… (more)
 
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mrbearbooks | 987 other reviews | Apr 22, 2024 |
I know I am repeating myself every time I write up a review for one of Diana Gabaldon’s books, but let me state it once again: I am not a fan of romance and chick lit, nor a member of its target audience, but that said, I do cotton to a good time travel story, and a well-done piece of historical fiction. And for that reason, I’ve found myself drawn to the adventures of Claire Randall, and Jamie Fraser, she a nurse from mid-20th Century Britain who goes through a portal in time, and finds the love of her life in a lusty Scottish highlander. Gabaldon’s books are dense with historical detail, and she does know how to spin a yarn and weave a story that keeps me coming back because I simply want to see what is going to happen next. The first two books in the series, OUTLANDER and DRAGONFLY IN AMBER, established the nature of Claire and Jamie’s peculiar relationship, including how they come together when she accidently passes from the
1940’s to 200 years in the past after stepping between a pair ancient stones in the Scottish countryside. The second book ends on the eve of the battle of Culloden, where the doomed Scottish rebels under the command of Charles Stuart were crushed by the ruthless British forces. Jamie compels a pregnant Claire to return to her own time, while he prepares to meet his fate at the hands of the British army.

The third book in the series, VOYAGER, picks up the story in the year of 1968, where Claire, after returning to her husband Frank, has raised Jamie’s daughter Brianna and become a doctor in her own right. She has always assumed that Jamie perished at Culloden, but now, decades later, some obscure historical research reveals that the love of her life actually did survive the battle. This being a lustily romantic series, nothing will stop Claire from returning to 18th Century Scotland, and rekindling her love with the red-headed hunk who swept her off her feet so many years in the past. With Brianna’s blessing, Claire goes back through the portal to the Scotland of the 1760s, to see if she and Jamie can’t start up again where they left off. That is the central premise of VOYAGER, and Gabaldon gets the most out of it. And at nearly 1100 pages in length, there is a lot of “most of it” in this book. Because two decades have passed since our two lovers parted, a good deal of the first few hundred pages are concerned with Claire and Jamie’s lives while they were apart. This necessitates some deft maneuvering with the POV for some chapters, as Claire recounts her story in first person, while Jamie’s post Culloden adventures is told in the third person. His story is one of fortuitous turns of fate, narrow escapes, a stint in a British prison, servitude to the nobility, and the rebuilding of his life as a free man. It was a narrative that held my interest, more so than 20th Century Claire who endures a troubled relationship with Frank before being widowed, raising a daughter, and getting an education to become a doctor. Ultimately, Claire and Jamie are reunited. That is when I thought this book really kicked things up a notch and this story became a real adventure. There’s smuggling and pirates, bordellos and buried treasure, old supporting characters and new ones, a return to France, and best of all, an 18th Century sea-going trip to the Caribbean, that includes a sojourn on a typhoid-ridden British man-of-war, in search of Jamie’s kidnapped nephew, Ian. Late in the book, there is the long-anticipated reappearance of one of my favorite villains in the series, before there is another turn of fate that sets up the fourth book in the series.

I am a sucker for a good sea-going story and for that reason alone, I liked VOYAGER. I think Gabaldon was wise to shift the narrative away from Britain and Scotland shortly after Claire and Jamie reunite, not that there weren’t dramatic possibilities in staying there, but the wider world offers so much more. And make no mistake, there is a lot of drama in this book, especially when it comes to just what Jamie was up to during those years when he and Claire were separated by a couple of centuries. I thought Claire’s “I don’t know you” reaction to one of them was a tired romantic cliché, while the other, which involves a son fathered under what could only be duress is a subplot that will likely turn up in another volume. As with most romantic fiction, the Gabaldon makes it plain that her male hero is quite the hunk, irresistible not only to Claire, but to Lord John Grey, Loaghire MacKenzie, and just about any other who falls under his charms. Claire remains a most capable heroine no matter what her circumstances or dramatic turn the plot demands; though don’t demand too much logical consistency in any of the characters, especially the leads. Gabaldon does create quite a large supporting cast; I was glad to see an older version of Fergus, the French street urchin Jamie brings into the extended family, return, and of the new characters, none was more intriguing than Mr. Willoughby, a Chinese man who has ventured far from home and has become part of the family as well. There are certain aspects of VOYAGER that some more modern readers will not be comfortable with, to say the least. There is no way to have a story set in the New World of the mid-1700s and not deal with the ever-present existence of slavery. Gabaldon has done her usual deep dive in research in how the institution was practiced in Jamaica and other islands of the Caribbean and the details she provides ring true. There are those who will say that this part of history should not be used in any kind of entertainment, but they should remember that books like VOYAGER are, for many readers, as close as they will ever get to an accounting of this history, and in her defense, I will say that Gabaldon leaves them with a harrowing impression. There is also certain sexual acts in the book that are coercive, but they are not presented in any titillating or erotic way, at least as I saw it. Readers should remember the adage “depiction is not endorsement” when it comes to things they find objectionable.

So, I’ve now made it through three books of the OUTLANDER series, which comes close to 3500 pages, and more words than I would dare guess, and I’m more than game to read the fourth, THE DRUMS OF AUTUMN to see where the story takes Claire, Jamie, Fergus, Ian and Mr. Willoughby. And there is no way Brianna is not going to follow in her mother’s footsteps at some point. It’s all about seeing “what happens next.”
… (more)
 
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wb4ever1 | 210 other reviews | Apr 13, 2024 |

Lists

1990s (1)

Awards

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Associated Authors

Davina Porter Narrator, Reader
Donna Sinisgalli Family tree
Hoang Nguyen Illustrator
S. P. Somtow Contributor
E. Lily Yu Contributor
Jaymee Goh Contributor
Elizabeth Bear Contributor
Rion Amilcar Scott Contributor
Matthew Baker Contributor
Adam-Troy Castro Contributor
Gwendolyn Kiste Contributor
Rebecca Roanhorse Contributor
Nibedita Sen Contributor
Kelly Barnhill Contributor
Anil Menon Contributor
Ken Liu Contributor
Tobias S. Buckell Contributor
Victor LaValle Contributor
Yvonne Gilbert Illustrator
Tomislav Tomic Illustrator
Rebecca Zomchek Illustrator
Craig Phillips Illustrator
Jon Proctor Illustrator
Juan Alarcon Illustrator
Kinuko Craft Cover artist
Ferenc Regös Cover artist
Anuirmeli Sallamo-Lavi Translator, (KÄÄnt.)
Barbara Schnell Translator
Marietta Anastassatos Cover designer
Barbara Steckhan Translator
Jeff Woodman Narrator
Philippe Safavi Traduction
Gabriele Kuby Übersetzer
Elfriede Fuchs Übersetzer
Jean Carbain Cover artist
Rita Seuß Übersetzer
Sonja Schumacher Übersetzer
Nico Keulers Cover artist
Lisbet Holst Translator
Karl Schumacher Photographer
Studio M Cover designer
Lillemor Binett Translator
Kathleen Lord Copy editor
Rick Holmes Narrator
Robert Hunt Cover artist
Belina Huey Cover designer
Jill Tanner Narrator

Statistics

Works
122
Also by
34
Members
109,515
Popularity
#79
Rating
4.1
Reviews
2,833
ISBNs
1,327
Languages
23
Favorited
728

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