My question is ... What happened?
Picking up Drums of Autumn after having read its predecessors is a gargantuan let-down. You expect a riveting frolic of a read and get 'Walden' instead. How could to author who fueled the break-neck, gut-wrenching speed of her plots with things like murder, vicious animal attacks, necromancy, male rape, ancient Celtic religion, piracy, voodoo, abduction, was torture .... how Could this same author give us the 'horror' of pulled back muscles and expect us to be content? After the Parisian underworld and the Scottish Highlands, the backwoods of the colonial US is not cuttin 'it, so to speak. Gabaldon gave timetravel a realistic feel then in her first three books, yet in Drums of Autumn you feel there Should be a baggage check behind one of the megaliths, since the whole process is demystified, first by Brianna's sojourn to the 18th century, and by Roger, who, hot on Brianna's heels, Decides to jump in too. Almost everything about this book if short of the mark, ESPECIALLY When You Know What a fantastic tale Gabaldon can write.
To be fair, I have to say Certain parts were interesting. The depiction of the hardships of plantation life in the rural South were captivating. The bear attack what graphic, vivid, and a glimmer of the old Gabaldon adventure I love. Claire's method of debriding Roger's gangrenous wound so hearkened back to the style of the other books. Brianna and Roger's courtship at the Scots Festival was very convincingly and tenderly written, without being sappy. Unfortunately, after the aforementioned courtship scenes, all we here about Brianna is how tall she is, and how red her hair is, and we are Reminded of this ad nauseam. Very little character development ... just tall / statuesque / towering / intimidating / impressive with red / flaming / auburn / Copper / sun-lit / firey hair / tresses / locks / mane. Pick a permutation.
It is an interesting concept, having Jamie and Claire age with the series, but does that mean we have to forget about nail-biting entertainment? I hope Gabaldon returns to her old style. I will buy her next book, but since I was burnt on this one, I want to wait for the paperback. Drums of Autumn, hardcover, which. To enormous and expensive disappointment