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Voyager (The Outlander Series, Vol. 3), by Diana Gabaldon
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Set in the intriguing Scotland of 200 years ago, the third installment in the romantic adventures of Jamie and Claire is as compelling as the first. Now that Claire knows Jamie survived the slaughter at Culloden, she is faced with the most difficult decision of her life. She aches to travel back through time again to find the love of her life, but, in order to do that, she must leave their daughter behind. It has been 20 years since she and Jamie were forced to separate. Can she risk everything, maybe even her life, on a gamble that their love has withstood the long, rigorous test of time?
- Sales Rank: #1228030 in Books
- Published on: 2006
- Formats: Unabridged, Audiobook
- Binding: Audio CD
Most helpful customer reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful.
Goes Way, Way Beyond the Ridiculous Threshold
By Clio Reads
Last week when I posted my review of Outlander, I wondered whether it would be smart to press on with the series in one massive reading binge, or whether, due to their epic length and the difficult emotional content, it would be smarter to take them slowly... as if I could. A longstanding joke in my family is that I was absent the day they handed out will power, and sure enough, even as I knew it would probably be too much for me emotionally, I devoured Dragonfly in Amber and then Voyager. And maybe it was too much of a good thing, or maybe it was just that I hit a wall and had no more empathy to waste on Jamie and Claire and their endless trevails, but I reached a point midway in this book where I just could not willingly suspend my disbelief anymore.
I'm not sure what happened. Having finished Outlander and Dragonfly in Amber, I was already well used to the endless cycle of Jamie and/or Claire finding themselves in mortal peril with no way out, only they do get out, celebrate their narrow escape with sexy times, and then shortly find themselves in mortal peril again. I'd suspended my disbelief quite a bit, and was just enjoying the ride.
Back in December 2011, the DBSA Romance Fiction Podcast (hosted by Sarah Wendell of Smart B****es, Trashy Books and Jane Litte of Dear Author) had an episode about the Ridiculousness Threshold -- that point at which the reader can no longer accept character or plot insanity and no longer enjoys the book. For me, I hit the Ridiculousness Threshold the moment Laoghaire's daughter walks in on Jamie and Claire at Lallybroch and calls him "Daddy!"
After that, no matter how I tried, I could not silence my inner skeptic. Almost every twist and turn of the convoluted plot made me roll my eyes and think, "Oh, for pete's sake, seriously?" The entire rest of the book is one absolutely ridiculous coincidence after another, and even in a series where I was willing to believe in time travel and the main characters' repeated skin-of-the-teeth survival against all odds, I just could not believe in pirates and slasher-killers and secret babies and zombies and shipwrecks and all of the rest of the insanity writ large over the 870 pages of this book.
And you know, the worst of it is that even though I'm totally done, and can't shut up my inner critic enough to enjoy reading, I still want to know what happens to Jamie and Claire next. Maybe I can find some Cliffs Notes.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
A Long Voyage
By Kathleen L. Scheibel
I found myself growing exceedingly bored by Jamie, Claire and their unlikely antics by the time I was less than halfway through the book. Unlike the first two books in the series, in which events, though unlikely, are at least interesting, the events in this book are preposterous beyond belief. I found myself skimming pages, then skipping sections all together as I found myself confronted with yet another impossible schematic. Gabaldon seems to have tried just a bit too hard to tie in incidents from early American history to fit with the unlikely story line, and I for one am skeptical. I will read the next book in the series to see if she can get back in the groove, but if this one proves as disappointing as the last, I will move on to books more worthy of my time.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Ach! Not again . . .
By Amy43
As far as historical romance goes, its a good one. Once again i was sucked into a vortex of 1100 pages worth of drama, fantasy, danger, romance, and oh a little history sprinkled in. Gabaldon is nothing if not an engaging storyteller. But if you don't have a lot of time on your hands to keep track of multiple story lines that flimsily twine together, you might become more irritated than entranced.
Like book 1, and book 2, I completely disappeared in Voyager while I read it. I'm a fan of science fiction, so I can appreciate themes like time travel, water horses, and magic. Gabaldon's work is fabulous storytelling.
If you haven't read the book already and don't like spoilers, stop reading :o)
As the third in this series, I have to admit I've become sometimes confused, if not outright frustrated with the myriad plot lines, or better yet, lack of depth, in Voyager. There was just too much going on, and not enough circling back to explain, make a point, or satisfy the need to 'know' the characters. A few things that left me saying 'Ach'! Or is it 'Och'?
1) when Claire returns to the 1700's, the reunion with Jamie was disappointing, pretty low key in fact, and didn't deliver on emotion. And as soon as they are reunited -- there is a fire, a murder, news of a serial killer, and then another murder during a smuggling raid. When are they going to connect? As it turns out, pretty much never -- or at least not in a satisfying way.
2) the story line with the marriage to Laogohaire was beyond disappointing; Claire from the first two books would have told Jamie about the attempted murder. This plot line felt false, from Claire's reaction and silence, to Jenny's betrayal, to Jamie's being shot, to Laogohaire's lack of sexual interest in Jamie (um, isn't he so verra sexually attractive to everyone else he encounters in the book?)
3) I became weary encountering tragedy after tragedy with the pair throughout their journey. I wanted to hurry through sections to move on to the 'story' about Jamie and Claire's reuniting. Like I said in point 1, it doesn't really happen. Rather than delve deep, like when they spent their first night, or had to say good-bye, bits of their reconciliation were sprinkled here and there amidst being taken captive, thrown overboard, surviving a hurricane, and meeting up (coincidence!) with another of Jamie's besotted English officers
4) how did Jamie become the leader of French troops? it was very odd this was never explained, and even more odd that he and these frenchmen - who we never head of again - took over the ship
5) granted the world was smaller then, but it doesn't work when every single new character we encounter (with the exception of Willoughby) has a prior relationship, or a future one for that matter, with Jamie or Claire
Gabaldon had Claire voice the idea that nothing should be cut from a novel if its important to the story line. Agreed. At the same time, too many coincidences, mishaps, and unexplained events can equal a rough ride as a reader.
All that being said, I loved the book in the sense that it drew me in, and took me somewhere else for a few hours every day. And in the end, that's what a good book does! But I hope some of these points have already been addressed in book 4 -- I won't be able to skip it. As a resident of South Carolina, I just have to know ...
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