Outlander Series discussion

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January Outlander Reread - See post 642 on page 13 for this weeks TOPIC!
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Then what caught my eye this reading, in Chapter 13, when Claire makes
her way down the stairs after seeing BJR., Dougal rushes upstairs etc, but when Dougal comes back down BJR is in pursuit. He looks at Claire & stops. (why?). Then BJR gets a glare from Dougal & he lets them go? BJR had soliders in the bar. He could stopped them.
I haven't gotten to Claire's 3rd encounter with BJR & I know she drops a bomb shell on BJR re: the Duke of Sandringham. Whether he had Jacobite sympathys or nor not was not clear as far as I read.

Then what caught my eye this reading, in Chapter 13, when Claire makes
her way down the stairs after seeing BJR., Dougal rushes upstairs etc, but when Dougal comes back down BJR is in pursuit. He looks at Claire & stops. (why?). Then BJR gets a glare from Dougal & he lets them go? BJR had soliders in the bar. He could stopped them.
I haven't gotten to Claire's 3rd encounter with BJR & I know she drops a bomb shell on BJR re: the Duke of Sandringham. Whether he had Jacobite sympathys or nor not was not clear as far as I read.

I figured that Dougal came down the stairs angry because he had just gotten into an argument with BJR upstairs after Claire had come down looking abused. THen when he saw her sitting there he stopped as he got his anger under control and decided on the plan of action. (Taking her to the well and questioning her.)
BJR didn't stop them because nobody was under arrest. Dougal was allowed to take her because he was instructed to deliver her back on a specific day for questioning. Dougal wasn't breaking any rules or taking her without permission.

I do think BJR played both sides English/Jacobites to his advantage when he could (DIA) & he definitely had something (I wish I knew what!) with the Duke of Sandringham...but I don't think he was in cahoots with Dougal. Dougal comes down the stairs and looks at Claire and knows that she is NOT an English spy. It is his moment of decision to take Claire and protect her. Randall could not stop Dougal and Claire. He had no right to AND Dougal is a very powerful man...and intimidating/ruthless/etc with very loyal clansmen close at hand. Were they meeting on MacKenzie lands? If so, more power to Dougal.

IMO, Dougal and BJR weren't exactly enemies, but I don't think they were friends or frenemies. Each was using the other to figure out who or what Claire was. When BJR hit Claire, I think that was the last straw for Dougal; he might be chauvinistic (or a man of his times), but Dougal wasn't the type of man who'd allow women to be abused that way. That's when I think he made up his mind to take Claire to the St. Whowever's pool and test her. When she passed the test, Dougal decided to "save" Claire the only way he knew how - with his own and Column's best interests in mind. Jamie & Claire be damned! It just worked out for them.
I always figured that BJR was under Sandringham's thumb, and, as Wendy said, Sandringham was trying to figure out who was on which side, so that he (Sandringham) knew on which side he was going to land. Did Randall know that the Duke was trying to decide which side to choose? I don't know. But Claire knowing that BJR was tied to Sandringham certainly made him (Randall) nervous - enough to decide she was dangerous.
Now that I think about it, did Sandringham ever choose? I suppose he did, in a way in DiA... but that's a topic better discussed when we get to that read/re-read.
That's why this discussion is so wonderful! It's great to have others to discuss and explore the story with.

The first thing I remember from my first read years ago was how much detail DG brings to the story and how she doesn't rush the plot along. Right from the beginning, even before Claire goes back through the stones, I was hooked!
I'm a huge fan of Charles Dickens and DG writes in much the same style. Her characters are truly "fleshed" out with all the traits of humanity: love & passion, hope & honor, but also despair, guilt, jealousy, etc.
I'm reading this on a Kindle but I have my paperback copy on the table next to me as I read. Is definitely easier to read a large book on a e-reader but I still love the comfort of having the physical book near by! :D

I actually wrote in mine this time. It was fun to mark passages and add notes in the margins.

Because Claire was able to work her way into clan/castle as healer, Could you use your current profession some how in the 16th century?
If anyone else comes up with a weekly question, please feel free to PM your suggestion to me and I'll add it to my list. I'm always open to suggestions. (Teresita, I do have your song question down. I'm waiting until later in February for that one.)








I have a ton of respect for Mrs. Fitz, she had her hands full. I'm a smart girl, I learn quick and can do anything - I hope I would be able to find something to do. :)



Because Claire was able to work her way into clan/castle as healer, Could you use your current pro..."
Nope! lol I own my own company doing marketing and public relations for other companies. Not sure how that would translate in her time.

But, like Mary, I do know something about cooking, so I suppose I could be useful as a cook. I'm not much of a gardener or herbalist, but I'm sure if I found myself in that time, I could probably figure out how to grow things, harvest honey, etc. In the context of Claire and Jamie's story, I wouldn't be of much help, except for being of some help to Mrs. Fitz at Castle Leoch and Jenny at Lallybroch.


So, really. Very few of us could make do.
Maybe a midwife or a herbalist?

At best, it owuld make you more of a survivor then someone like me who has none.

Modern medicine does not revolve around herbs at all. You would just have to lean quick and keep your mouth shut. lol!

I mean, it still makes me laugh that that Father who was bitten by the dogs outside Castle Leoch was a witness against Claire! All she said to him was that if he didn't treat the bites, his leg would get infected... and he took that as a curse! And it seems the Father died as a result of the infection - ay!

Yes, a woman in today's military would most likely would not be asked to join Colum/Dougal's military, but they are trained in first aid, hand to hand combat, depending on how far their skills are they learned to live off the land etc. At the very least they can read & write.
I figure this woman would have kneed BJR and been home in bed with Frank by now.


A nurse by profession I have worked in Emergency Medicine so I could be a bit like Claire in that sense.
However my unpaid profession is a Guide Leader (Girl Scouts) that would probably be a lot more use.


OK, just wanted to mention this, and I'm not sure if it's been brought up before (I haven't read all the posts). I LOVE DG's writing, I think she is phenomenal, and this is not a critique, more of an observation...but...one minute Geilie's eyes are grey and the next they are green. When I first saw her mention grey eyes, I was startled because I am a huge Roger fan and he has beautiful green eyes that I thought were inherited from Geilie. I'm just wondering if anyone else noticed the inconsistency and why didn't the editor? Or maybe I missed something, is it somewhere mentioned that Geilie's eyes change color? Again, I am not criticizing DG... I wish a had an iota of her talent!



Good catch on Geilie's eyes. I hadn't noticed that one, and it would bother me because of Roger.



I noticed the grey eyes too. But I'm sure it was not during my first reading of Outlander (not knowing the significance then!). I think this is also the explanation for the editor(s) missing it: How ofter would they read a book? You will find this error in "The Outlandindish Companion", though: Appendix I, Errata, page 502.
I am wondering about 2 other things: When will "The Outlandish Companion, part 2" be out, does anybody know? And why does everybody make excuses when mentioning such things like the "grey eyes", if it were a sacrilege? Of course these are great books, otherwise, would we (many, many people) spend so much time reading and discussing them?




And, as Lotte stated, no one interested in author-bashing would bother to re-read the series.

I think thats why people were upset. It's hard to read someone continuously bash our favorite author, lmao. Eventually you lose your temper.
There's a reason Sara Donati calls DG fans 'rabid'. :)
I find the discrepencies fun. It's like watching my favorite movie and looking for those mess-ups. They're bound to happen everywhere, and I'm terrible at catching them in books. I tend to not pick up on those small discrepencies for some reason.
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The Outlandish Companion (other topics)