Selected Product: | Drums of Autumn Abridged, Au Author: Diana Gabaldon Publisher: Random House Audio Release Date: 1996-12-01 ISBN-10: 0553473328 ISBN-13: 9780553473322 List Price: $25.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Outlander ISBN-10: 0440212561 ISBN-13: 9780440212560 List Price:$7.99 Dragonfly in Amber ISBN-10: 0385335970 ISBN-13: 9780385335973 List Price:$15.00 Voyager ISBN-10: 0385335997 ISBN-13: 9780385335997 List Price:$15.00 A Breath of Snow and Ashes (Outlander) ISBN-10: 0385340397 ISBN-13: 9780385340397 List Price:$15.00 The Fiery Cross (Outlander) ISBN-10: 0440221668 ISBN-13: 9780440221661 List Price:$7.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Drums of Autumn by Diana Gabaldon (ISBN-10: 0553473328, ISBN-13: 9780553473322). At this time we have not yet written a review for Drums of Autumn by Diana Gabaldon (ISBN-10: 0553473328, ISBN-13: 9780553473322). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com In her long awaited new novel, Drums of Autumn, Diana Gabaldon continues the remarkable story of Claire and Jamie Fraser that began with the classic Outlander, and its bestselling sequels, Dragonfly in Amber and Voyager.
Cast ashore in the American colonies, the Frasers are faced with a bleak choice: return to a Scotland fallen into famine and poverty, or seize the risky chance of a new life in the New World--menaced by Claire's certain knowledge of the coming Revolution.
Still, a highlander is born to risk--and so is a time-traveler. Their daughter, Brianna, is safe--they think--on the other side of a dangerous future; their lives are their own to venture as they will. With faith in themselves and in each other, they seek a new beginning among the exiled Scottish Highlanders of the Cape Fear, in the fertile river valleys of the Colony of North Carolina.
Even in the New World, though, the Frasers find their hope of peace threatened from without and within; by the British Crown and by Jamie's aunt, Jocasta MacKenzie, last of the MacKenzies of Leoch. A hunger for freedom drives Jamie to a Highlander's only true refuge: the mountains. And here at last, with no challenge to their peace--save wild animals, Indians, and the threat of starvation--the Frasers establish a precarious foothold in the wilderness, secure in the knowledge that even war cannot invade their mountain sanctuary.
But history spares no one, and when Brianna follows her mother into the past, not even the mountains can shelter a Highlander. For Brianna too has an urgent quest: not only to find the mother she has lost and the father she has never met, but to save them both from a future that only she can see. Not quite as engrossing as the first three books in the series | Customer Rating: | About a hundred pages into Outlander, the first book of author Diana Gabaldon's unique historical romance series with a time travel twist, I was hooked. In Claire and Jamie Fraser, Gabaldon has created compelling, unique characters, and the sparks from their relationship virtually fly off the pages.
When we last left Claire and Jamie at the end of book three, Voyager, they had survived a shipwreck which had left them in the American colonies. Drums of Autumn opens with the couple preparing to make a home for themselves in the New World. Just as the Frasers are beginning to find their place in 1767, the book flashes forward to present-day--1969, that is--and their daughter, Brianna, left alone in Boston when her mother returned to the past to reunited with her true love. Although Brianna has the support of Roger Wakefield, who is clearly besotted with her, she is still struggling to come to terms with the loss of the only father she ever knew, who she loved deeply, and another father who she has never met, a conflict that has major implications for the plot of this sequel.
The story continues to flash between these two settings, and this is where I thought the book started to feel weighed down. I've always thought that the Outlander series was at its best when it featured Claire and Jamie; although the scenes between Brianna and Roger were interesting, they felt like a distraction after awhile. In addition, Gabaldon uses a writing technique here not employed in her other books: there are times when Claire is featured in the scene, yet the scene is NOT told from the first person perspective. Given that the reader was always given Claire's first-person point of view in the prior Outlander novels, this felt like an unnecessary gimmick to me.
Finally, at 1070 pages, this book felt overlong to me. I don't mind long novels when they are engaging, but I definitely felt bored throughout much of the middle of this book; I think I would've enjoyed it much more if sharper editing had been employed. Still, I like these characters enough to care what happens to them next, so I am sure that I will still go on to read the next book the series. My final rating is 3 1/2 stars--just be sure to read the three preceding books in the series before attempting to tackle this one. | Twists and turns | Customer Rating: | Gabaldon's series just keeps getting better and better. I was ENTRALLED with this book. This one had more twists and turns than the previous novels. There was a skull found by Claire that had me wondering "Who was it?" This was found out later in the book, the seperation of Brianna and Roger, and the things that happened to him in the hands of the Mohawk.
I do admit that there were slow parts of the book, as in the previous ones but, for me, that is part of the reason that makes these books so appealing...she sets the scenes up, takes the reader to the mid-eighteenth century and makes one envision how North Carolina might have looked during that time. I've been to South Carolina and Charleston and can easitly see without much effort how the town and surrounding countryside might have looked back then.
Gibaldon is quite discriptive so it is just as easy to imagine the scenery with my mind as it was in real life.
Just like Jamie, although not as badly, she puts Roger through the mill as well. He is tested in his love for Brianna. I won't say whether he comes through or not, I'll let any future readers find out for themselves, but I do feel for the poor man.
I am looking forward to starting THE FIERY CROSS now. Drums only left me wanting more. As one reviewer stated, start from the beginning. Even though each book does give you snippets of what occurs in previous books and it's possible to read them alone, it is better if you begin with Outlander and continue from there. | I love this! | Customer Rating: | | Drums of Autumn like her other books is an adventure and the romance and life of Claire and Jamie continue. It is worth reading and it is as amazing as her first three books. | Fourth of Six | Customer Rating: | I gobble down books. Drums of Autumn, while a laudable addition to the Outlander series, was not a book I couldn't put down. In fact, I did. It took me over a week to finish, with one large sitting at the beginning and a larger one at the end. For fans of the series only.
***Spoilers*** In short, Jamie and Claire, newly reunited, are now settled in North Carolina's extensively described wilderness (and, though a NC horticulturalist myself in the heart of scrub-forest country, I have never waxed so fully on the beauty of pine savannas nor do I ever plan to) - an action in and of itself taking a 1/3rd the novel. Much of the rest is devoted to their daughter, Brianna, and her would-be lover Roger trying to find the pair in the past, and the Comedy of Errors that results once everyone finds everyone else, however unknowing all parties to having found each other. *** End Spoilers***
All in all, as before stated Drums of Autumn proves to be Outlander's weakest link. And, as fond as I am of this series, it still only gets 4 out of 5. | Outlander | Customer Rating: | | Great Book once you get through the first 100 pages or so, then I couldn't put it down. The love between these two characters (Jamie and Claire) is amazing. |
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