![]() ![]() A friend of mine binge-read this entire series and while I can see how that would be appealing (because the idea of buying Drums of Autumn for my Kindle while I’m in San Jose for the weekend crossed my mind more than once today), I feel like I’d get sick of this world if I tried to read too much of it all at once. But come on, I spent five weeks with this book and it’s time to leave the Frasers and their family for a while. ![]() ![]() I feel bad for even saying that because my overall feeling about Voyager is very positive. ![]() Which means, of course, that this is probably going to not be an incredibly useful review, but I don’t necessarily care, because I’m just so glad to be moving on to something else. It was all very strange, and I suspect I may never know all the answers to all of the questions I have. It was a mad dash to the finish, filled with pirates and voodoo and escaped slaves and a very strange interlude in a cave with some crushed up gemstones, that may or may not have been the stones on the island that Jamie sent his nephew Ian after the day he was kidnapped. After what feels like the time it took Claire and Jamie to find each other again between the events of Dragonfly in Amber and Voyager, I finally finished the third book in the Outlander series yesterday afternoon. ![]()
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