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Voyager (Outlander, #3)

This morning I finished the third installment of the Outlander Series, Voyager by Diana Gabaldon.
There is so much that happens in this book it is hard to know where to begin!  Reader be warned, if you haven’t read the  books up until now this post might contain spoilers. So if you don’t want to know what’s going on then stop reading now.

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So let’s start with the basics….Voyager picks up where Dragonfly in Amber (Book II) leaves off, with the realization that Jamie is not dead and Claire left with a big question mark….what to do next?
Voyager is a little slow going at first as with any epic tale, the writer has a duty of sorts to remind the loyal readers where the proceeding book left off and Gabaldon does that by slowly catching up with the lives (20 years later) of Claire, Jamie, Frank, Rodger and Brianna, and Lord Grey.
Some people argue that Book II was the least appealing in the series while others say Book III was…I can’t decided, both of these books were a struggle for me in some ways and for different reasons, though I favored Voyager more than DIA. I liked how the lives of the characters kind of culminated together by half way through. I thought Gabaldon did a great job merging all the lives and stories together and did so fairly quickly all things considering.

The storyline centers on a time-travelling 20th-century nurse (Claire Randall Fraser) and her 18th-century Scottish husband (Jamie Fraser), and are located in Scotland, France, and America.The heroine of the bestselling Outlander, Claire, returns in Voyager as a mother to Brianna Ellen Randall and living in Boston in the year 1965. The preceding novel, Dragonfly in Amber, ended with Claire and Brianna coming to grips with the truth of Brianna’s real father Jamie Fraser and Claire’s travel through time. In Voyager Claire and Brianna trace Jamie’s life since the battle of Culloden during the Scottish Rising. Discovering Jamie survived the massacre that heralded the destruction of many clans in Scotland sends Claire back to the stone circle that first hurtled her through time – twenty years before. Voyager is a poignant tale of two lovers finding each other again, embarking on a whirlwind journey filled with danger on the high seas and the constant peril of Jamie’s past catching up with them. As the third in what is now a seven-book series (according to the author there will be a Book 8, possibly a Book 9) of Claire Randall Fraser and her Highlander husband Jamie, the story is an integral step in a bestselling and surprisingly rich tale spanning the time from the Scottish Rising of 1745, to the American Revolution.
Though there were some moments in the story though that I struggled with but over all the book left me hanging in suspense and eagerly ready to start the next book. Most of my struggles came with the reconsiling of the 20 year absence between Jamie and Claire and the some of the setting/scenery.
Having them all travel to the West Indies was a mixed dynamic for me. Initially I thought it was a good plot twist and since next to Victorian/Gothic history my next fav period is the British Colonial adventures (ie; danger and pirates on the high exotic seas of the Caribbean). So I was excited when they made sail for the west but then I thought like I would be seasick by the time they reached the islands! Besides Jamie being sick every minute of their time abroad, the typhoid epidemic and injuries and the general description of the livings conditions and the swells of the seas was enough to make me WISH I were seasick! I was glad when they finally reached shore, the journey took to long for me, yes I know that was the idea but still….I was so tired of the ship when they landed I was really ready to move on to something else.

The other thing that was strange for me was the ending, I know the Caribbean was all slave trade and African culture but the ending where Claire and Jamie here Brianna’s voice through the ‘seer’ (Margaret) and all the slaves and their ‘witchcraft’ was a little much for me–authentic to be sure but I was kind of lost for a minute during the last few chapters. I had to go back and re-read what was going on since I am not very familiar with African culture and voodoo/witchcraft history I felt lost and confused toward the end. I was also confused by all the island hopping, all the cultures (Chinese, African, Spanish, Scottish, English, French, Dutch…the list goes on)–there was just a lot going on with everything and then the reappearance of Geilie with all the witchcraft and time travel stuff–my head was spinning by the end to figure everything out. I am still not sure if I have it all worked out or not. There was just so much to cram into the book I think it was a little overwhelming on all accounts–good but still overwhelming.
I think the biggest thing I struggled with was the characters, the passage and changing that comes with time, and how that effects people and their relationships.
As I mentioned before in one of my postings from DIA (Book II), I struggled when Claire had sex with the King–morally it bugged me regardless of her reasons. Same with Captain Randall, I felt like his whole character was not redeemable and it bothered me that Gabaldon tried to show that parts of him were still ‘human’. That said, in Book III I felt like I reconciled lots of feelings I had about the characters and their choices–seriously by the end of Book III, I was emotionally exhausted.
Creating characters which the audience can relate to is truly what makes the difference between a readable story and a memorable story. Finding yourself in the characters and forming those connections is the essence of literature….not only being able to identify with the protagonist but also the villains and finding qualities that you desire or fancy yourself to share is the key to connecting the story with its readers–being able to relate to the characters and their experiences is so important and this is where I think Gabaldon shows what makes the Outlander Series different from other tales of romance and adventure–here characters are real in us.
When Claire finds out that in her absence Jamie didn’t ‘live like a monk’ and in fact married again…I was a little more than bothered. Not that I expected him to NOT do those things but something about knowing that he did find other women to care for (maybe not love but desire at least) bothered me. Like Claire, I had to work through it and rationalize both Jamie and Claire’s perspectives and feelings of being robbed of a life together for 20 years.
Knowing that Jamie had been with other women, marrying, and even having another child seemed like a betrayal to Claire and her memory–somehow a violation of their love. I can relate to Claire’s anger and frustration for her situation but in the end, I had to rationalize the feelings of anger like Claire does. I think Gabaldon does a great job taking Claire through the varying feelings and emotions ultimately to come to the final question–in the end does it really matter what happened in the past? Why ask ‘if this then that’, or wonder if something were different….it’s useless to be upset over something that cannot be changed, she like Jamie must live with their choices and look at their future together rather than their past. I think Claire summed it up best when she quoted A.E. Houseman:

Halt by the headstone/ The heart no longer stirred,/ And say the lad that loved you/ Was the one that kept his word
I think that is when I too finally reconciled the past and separate lives which Claire and Jamie had lived–after that it was easy to forgive and forget and realize that their love was all that mattered, nothing else.
The other difficult obstacle to overcome was the darkness and mystery of their lives…..20 years and to have once known each other so well–they meet again as strangers. Claire knows Jamie has been many things and many men since their time together and each have lived a lifetime while continuing to love each other. In some ways this is exciting and like getting to know someone all over again–another mystery to keep you hooked so to speak. But like Claire and Jamie, I could easily relate to their trepidation. There was one scene which stood out to me as being the moment when they both realized that while they once knew each other well, time had passed and changed both of them and there would always be parts of their life and being that neither would know, a darkness in each of them which they might not even know or touch–two separate people, strangers to each other maybe–but yet in the end they know each other well and that is all they need.
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