O is for Outlander

O is for Outlander.

For this year's A to Z I'm featuring books I've read based on the Reading Challenge.


Today's book is one set somewhere you've always wanted to visit: Outlander by Diana Gabaldon.



I've noted before that if it wasn't for Outlander my life would be very different:
A great book affects you not only at an emotional level - when you can't let go of the characters - or at a mental level - when you learn new words and information at every reread - but at a life level.
It's a stack of dominoes - if I hadn't read Outlander, I wouldn't have joined the (awesome!) Compuserve Books and Writers Community (and its group of wonderful readers and writers!). If I hadn't joined the Forum, I wouldn't have started taking my writing seriously. Imagine, I used to finish a story or novel and just leave it by the wayside. Now I've got two fully edited novels - one out on queries! - and I'm in the process of overhauling [four more]. If I hadn't started taking my writing seriously, I wouldn't be blogging, and I wouldn't have met all you wonderful people!
Yay for Diana Gabaldon!

The "somewhere I've always wanted to visit" aspect is, of course, Scotland. Later books in the series are set in France and North America, but I've been lucky enough to visit most of those settings (especially France and the Carolinas in the United States). In Scotland though, I've been to Edinburgh twice, yet have never been further north.

Let's see... I'd like to take a distillery tour, roam the Highlands, explore the islands, drop by the Walkers Shortbread factory, attend a Runrig or Idlewild concert or two...

My Runrig playlist

My Idlewild playlist

With the Outlander musical, and now the new Outlander series on Starz (with its evocative score, especially the title music, which always makes me cry) -- not to mention the awesome Outlander Kitchen -- there's an Outlander to suit (nay, overload) all five senses.

And that's not including all the knitting possibilities!

While I'm visiting the United Kingdom, I'd also love to attend the Hay-on-Wye literary festival.


 (love these press photos from the website!)

This year's edition will feature talks by Neil Gaiman, Amanda Palmer, Graham Swift, Elif Safak, Irvine Welsh, Rose Tremain, and Stephen Fry, among others. Wish I could go!

Which festivals would you like to attend?

Comments

I do hope you get to visit Scotland, because it's a beautiful place. I'd like to go back again some day.
Hi Deniz - lovely post and how fascinating to read how much her work influenced your start in the authoring world, and ... and ...

I have just ordered it! DG Hudson also raves about her series ...

http://dghudson-rainwriting.blogspot.co.uk/ she's done two Challenges on Paris ..

The Hay festival is always full of inspiring people and it's a tiny village ...

I'm just fascinated by your post and how much you were influenced by this book .. cheers Hilary
This comment has been removed by the author.
Deniz Bevan said…
Yay! Hope you enjoy it Hilary! If the first book's not your cup of tea you can always skip ahead -- the second book is more history-filled and the third is more adventure and by the time the next books come along they're true family sagas. Love them!
I'd like to do a distillery tour, Alex...