As it turned out, I ended up reading it while I was laid up with a rotten cold, so I suppose the experience was mostly the same.īack to the story: our girl Claire was an army nurse, and was happily beginning her post-war life with hobby genealogist Frank Randall in 1946 when she tumbled through the wormhole. In retrospect, it would have made a good lockdown read (so if we have to live through another once-in-a-century pandemic, be sure to put Outlander on your nightstand). It’s a CHUNKY book, as I alluded to just a second ago – 868 pages in my edition. Her test run has been published in 38 different languages, sold over 25 million copies around the world, and it’s been adapted into a highly-acclaimed television series. Diana Gabaldon sat down about thirty years ago to have a go at writing a novel “for practice” – y’know, just for fun – and this is the result. Outlander is a time travel-historical romance, previously published as Cross-Stitch. (If you use an affiliate link, you won’t travel through time but you will send a small commission my way!)
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