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Kay
(last edited Dec 09, 2010 05:12AM)
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Dec 09, 2010 05:11AM
hmmm. I always wondered if the Christ/sacrifice/redemption imagery was intentional. Thanks for answering that for me. Don't apologize for it. It's what I love most about your books and, to my thinking, carries the most impact.
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The pain made the story more real to me. I cried during the Wentworth scence, but I BAWLED my eyes out at the Abbey. That scene was so impactful. Thank you for writing real characters with real events. Thank you for not writing the "perfect" hero and heroine. No one in life is perfect. It's our faults that make us human and showing such faults in your characters makes them more believable and easier to relate to.
I had a hard time reading it but I definitely think you did the right thing. If you would have glossed it over and Jamie got out of it at the last minute the book wouldn’t have had such a strong impact on the reader. I love this series and I love reading about Jamie and Claire! Thanks Diana!
Perhaps it's hard for some men to read the rape/torture scene becuase it is such a foreign concept to them. Women deal with thoughts of harm to their person frequently. Most women are almost always congnizant of the potential dangers of rape or theft. I imagine most men don't think much about harm to their person because of rape and are probably affronted at the notion that they could be compelled to submit sexually to anyone, much less another man.In literature, it's not a matter of whether the heroine in the novel is the victim of something or other, it's a matter of what she's the victim of and her degree of pain. Certainly, scenes containing homosexual rape are probably not in a male reader's comfort zone while women are use to reading about such abuse to females.
As to the "intense emotional, physical pain" of the hero, I read to "feel" the emotions of characters.
While I did not "enjoy" reading the reape scene in the sense that it brought me pleasure, it was certainly well-written and unusual...at least it was unusual in my reading. I was actually equally uncomfortable with Claire's behavior after she finds Jaime in Wentworth. While courageous, she wasn't exactly circumspect. To stay in his cell asking about his obvious poor state of health seemed to me to be silly. Once she had discovered his location, she should have gone for reinforcements or hung back in hopes of taking his captors by surprise. I dunna know...I just kept thinking, "Claire, of the many silly and impetuous moments you've had, this is about the silliest. Don't linger in the cell, get the hell out of there and come back or at the very least hide...don't get caught!"
I agree with Alicia. As a victim of rape myself, I thought it might be helpful for some men to read that part of the book, if nothing else so that they could somewhat identify with some of the elements of rape in a new way On another note, I love the Outlander series, and I am not a reader of romance. I love the historical aspects that Gabaldon has woven into her stories with the touch of the supernatural mixed in. Going through the uprising against Charles into the culture of the late 1700's and the revolutionary war is absolutely enthralling. I love the descriptiveness. Gabaldon really makes me feel as if I am there, living it with the characters!



