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The Outlandish Companion
The Outlandish Companion
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Diana Gabaldon
List Price: $29.00
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Product Details

  • Author: Diana Gabaldon
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
  • EAN: 9780385324137
  • ISBN: 0385324138
  • Label: Delacorte Press
  • Manufacturer: Delacorte Press
  • Number of Items: 1
  • Number of Pages: 608
  • Product Group: Book
  • Publication Date: 1999-06-29
  • Publisher: Delacorte Press
  • Release Date: 1999-06-29
  • Studio: Delacorte Press
  • Title: The Outlandish Companion
Avg Customer Rating: 4 stars

Product Description: For nine years, four books, and nearly 4,000 pages, Diana Gabaldon has entranced readers with her talent for historical authenticity, dramatic plot lines, and strong characters in the Outlander series. Her superb writing has earned a loyal audience, but after a million and a half words, even the most fervent of fans may have a difficult time trying to recall the exact details of the secondary characters, let alone the obscure ones. Thankfully, Gabaldon's The Outlandish Companion is here to help.

Part crib notes and part trivia guide, this essential handbook includes synopses of the first four novels, a character guide, notes on plot development and research, answers to frequently asked questions, and teasers for the upcoming novels--there're even horoscope charts of the central characters, a list of fan Web sites, and choice recipes for the truly devoted.

Readers looking for a fix of Gabaldon's humorous voice or insight into her writing processes and characters will certainly be more than satisfied, but those looking for the next installment of Jamie and Claire's adventures will have to wait for The Fiery Cross, the fifth book in this bestselling series, expected sometime in late 1999 to early 2000. --Nancy R.E. O'Brien


Customer Reviews


5 stars Great insight into the Outlander series
This is an excellent companion book to the Outlander series of books. I would recommend this book to any reader who wants a bit more information on the process of writing. Was a bit disappointing to find extracts of her more recent novels in this book... a bit like paying for the same books twice, but apart from that, it was very interesting. Was also a lot cheaper to buy from Amazon new that to buy second hand of another site in Australia.


5 stars The Outstanding Outlander Companion
Outstanding addition for those who have enjoyed the series. Many details are clarified and explanations for why are given. A must for those who have read the books as they were published and forget the minor subplots over time.


3 stars Companion
THE OUTLANDISH COMPANION is a fan's handbook that is as engaging as the series it details. Diana Gabaldon's expert early computer skills, Google did not exist when she started writing the Outlander series. She was working with scientific data.
The horoscopes were drawn by a fan and make fascinating reading, you wonder if Diana will use any of the information as character points. Tempe ting for a writer but shaky for a scientist.
The dictionary (glossary) could be stronger, but I know the problems with that one. What is obvious and what is necessary are vital questions.
Read the stories, then the companion and hope there will be a second companion when the series is complete.
Nash Black, author of WRITING AS A SMALL BUSINESS and SINS OF THE FATHERS.


3 stars Delivers What It Promises
Fans of this (some say too wordy) time traveling series will find a generous amount of information given here, both of the behind the scenes sort and simply of the type that details and hopefully enhances an understanding of the colorful world Diana Gabaldon has created over the past decade and a half. As they've moved from Scotland to North Carolina, England to France, from the twentieth century to the eighteenth, the characters of these novels have certainly lived eventful, albeit imaginary lives, and in the pages of this encyclopedic overview, much is, as promised, explained by this likeably down to earth writer. Gabaldon has cordially taken the time to answer the questions readers have most often asked her, listed and given short biographies of everyone (sigh, yes everyone) who ever appeared in her hefty books, has talked about settings, customs, legends, histories, and anachronisms as they've related to her 4,000-plus page-long saga, and has probably unintentionally turned out yet another work so massive it will bend the shelves of almost any bookcase.

Of course for those (um, like me) who bailed out after getting through the first book and who might wish to read condensations of Gabaldon's epic novels in order to see what came next, The Outlandish Companion is a time saver, because it includes dense, thorough, Cliff Notes' like overviews of every book in the series the author had released up to the time of this guide's publication. Personally I found spending two hours reading a couple hundred pages of overviews was more enjoyable than investing three months in her novels, but I know fans of the series will glare at me for thinking so, and I respectfully understand why.

All in all I'm tempted to say a hard-core fan might get more from The Outlandish Companion than someone who has casually read her works, but there is still much here to catch the eye. Frankly, there is also a lot contained within that the book would have been better without. Like her novels themselves, this reference work was too wordy, too self-indulgent, and heavy enough to leave your chest bruised if you try to read it in bed.

Possess it at your own peril...


4 stars A good companion
Not exactly what I expected but overall a good companion for the Outlander series. I think it was worth the price just to find out how to correctly pronounce Laoghaire (which in my mind was pronounced as Log-hair).