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Outlander, by Diana Gabaldon

I have no idea why I waited so long to read this book. I'd heard about this great series about a woman from modern times (well, post-WWII, anyway) who is magically transported two hundred years into the past, where, despite having a nice husband in her own time, she falls in love - somewhat unwillingly - with another nice man in the past, and gets all mixed up in the events preceding the battle of Culloden.

But for some reason I just didn't get around to reading it until recently - and now I find that I must go out and buy about half-a-dozen sequels, because the first book was every bit as good as everyone has been telling me it was.

Outlander begins with one of the lead characters, Claire Randall, an English nurse, on a second honeymoon in Scotland. There's some discussion of the role her husband's ancestor, a Captain John Randall, played in the bloody hisory of the Jacobite Risings - the long attempt by the Highland Scots to return the house of Stuart to the throne of England and Scotland following deposition of James II in 1688, which was finally crushed in 1746 at the Battle of Culloden. (I should digress here to note that I myself am part Scot, part Welsh, and all Celt, and as far as the history of the time is concerned, my sympathies are all with the Scots and not the slightest with the Sassenach.)

While in Scotland, Claire discovers that there is a standing circle near where they are staying, where some of the local women still worship in the "old ways." When she explores the circle herself, she finds herself drawn back to 1745, where she finds herself caught up in the politics of the clans, the cause of the Jacobites, the invading Sassenach - one of whom is her husband's ancestor, and eventually a bold Scotsman named Jamie Fraser who wins her heart.

It's fascinating historical fiction wrapped up in a time-travelling frame, with all the complications that entails, it's a refreshing romance between two people who become friends and partners as well as lovers, and it's - most welcome of all - a story of an intelligent, resourceful, courageous and tough woman who survives and thrives despite being thrown out of her own time and all that she knows and understands.

Date: 2007-07-17 06:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] devilwrites.livejournal.com
Thanks for such a lengthy response! :) I ask because I'm just now getting acclimated to the SFF/R and paranormal romance sub-genre, so I'm interested in hearing what people think works and what doesn't. :)

Date: 2007-07-17 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sausconys-books.livejournal.com
You're welcome. :-) I'm still just getting acquainted with paranormals and I also love to hear what people like and dislike. When I first started reading SFFR, or first realized that's what I liked all along, I found romanticsf.com to be the biggest help.

Oh, I remembered that the other paranormals I couldn't think of were mostly published by Love Spell. I've been going through a very negative toward romance period for a while now though and a lot of those books were attempted recently, so my mood might have biased me against some of the books. But I stand by what I said about Feehan and Lindsey. ;-)

Date: 2007-07-17 07:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] devilwrites.livejournal.com
I find that a lot of stuff that I read is mislabeled paranormal romance, because it's urban fantasy with more or less a romantic subplot. My favorites in this genre are all of Carrie Vaughn's books, starting with Kitty and the Midnight Hour, Kim Harrison's Dead Witch Walking (which has no romantic element really, but hints to later books which I haven't read), and Kelley Armstrong's Bitten, which is VERY MUCH paranormal romance.

I've read a few of Asaro's Skolian Empire books and have enjoyed them, but I can't think of other writers, off the top of my head, that write SFR.

But Juno Books's anthology, Best New Paranormal Romance had some good stories in it, and introduced me to Sandra McDonald, whose SF (with a romantic subplot?) novel, The Outback Stars debuted earlier this year. I've got it, but haven't read it yet.

Alas. So many books, so little time...

Date: 2007-07-17 07:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] morgan-dhu.livejournal.com
I read Tate Hallaway's Tall Dark and Dead because Hallaway is really Lyda Morehouse, who wrote the Archangel Protocol series, which is an amazing religious cyberpunk novel.

It was probably the first book I've read that way officially labelled as paranormal romance - unless you count Laurell Hamilton's books, the first of which kind of predate the growth of the genre, or half a dozen other books that have both paranoraml urban fantasy elements and romance elements.

I enjoyed it a lot, but that's probably because I enjoy Morehouse's work a lot. I know there are other paranormal romance writers out there that I will like, becasue for years and years there have been people who have been writing books that I've liked that would now be marketed under that label. Tanya Huff's Victory Nelson books (and to a lesser extent, her Keeper Chronicles, too). Mercedes Lackey's Diana Tregarde books. And so on.

And on another note, I'm looking forward to reading Sandra McDonald's book, too. I read her Tiptree Award-winning short story "The Ghost Girls of Rumney Mill" earlier this year and was highly impressed. I think I put the anthology you mention here on my wishlist based on one of your reviews - is this the one edited by Paula Guran?

Date: 2007-07-17 07:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] devilwrites.livejournal.com
I think I put the anthology you mention here on my wishlist based on one of your reviews - is this the one edited by Paula Guran?

Yep. :)

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