Jump to content

Type keyword(s) to search

The Books vs. The Show: Comparisons, Speculation, and Snark


Athena
  • Reply
  • Start Topic

Recommended Posts

2 hours ago, fishpan said:

I kind of think that is how things are headed. 

So instead of them sticking completely to what they had in the books about the hanging they may have use that.  Have Roger being caught between Murtagh's regulators and Jamie's obligations to Tryon due to Jamie dismissing Roger because he doesn't think Roger is cut out for the 18th century.

As for having Richard Rankin croak his way through the rest of the show, its possible.  Look at Christian Bale and half the cast of Supernatural - how long have those guys been croaking through roles?

I haven't seen Supernatural or Christian Bale (don't watch much really) but clearly long term croaking is an option then. 

  • Love 1
Link to comment
14 hours ago, fishpan said:

As for the differences between Roger in the book and show - suppose they actually want to show us him growing into a badass who can cope in the 18th century while being the one hit with the biggest culture clash out of Claire, Bree and him.  I say that seeing how a lot of Claire's foibles at first could be dismissed by the Mackenzies' due to the' fact she is a woman and English then because she is Jamie's wife.  Bree gets a pass with her parents because she is their child.  Roger should experience something different.  It is in shown in part in the books as Jocasta telling him that she's leaving River Run to Jemmy instead of Bree as he is basically penniless and no-one can really vouch for him, (something no one complains to Claire about once she is married to Jamie considering everyone else has designs on Lallybroch).  But Roger is a Scot, living with Scots and he can't really fight, shoot, farm, butcher meat or basically do a lot of the tasks that men in that time, men like Jamie and even Fergus would have done since a young age. 

This is something I can see the show making more of than the books do, where it's a lot of subtext that's certainly there but isn't so much of a story in its own right.  It's one of the more interesting twists on gender roles in this series for me that first Claire and then Bree have an easier time with time travel than Roger does and I think says quite a bit about changing expectations of those gender roles.  Claire is Claire and then she's enough of a fish out of water in Highland culture that a lot of what she doesn't know can easily be excused away or overlooked because she's Jamie's wife.  Bree, with the relatively short exception of her traveling to find her parents where bad things do happen to her, almost always has relatives to smooth her path and cover for any difficulties she might be having.  And if they get it wrong, they're just women anyway. 

Roger comes over alone.  He has no known family ties they can explain, and he's a modern academic thrust into a world that largely values brute strength and skill and know-how in any man who doesn't have the means to be an academic.  This season's speed read of an ending skips the late book exchange of Jamie acknowledging that Roger doesn't have much to offer in that department, but that he's strong and willing and that's a start.  The whole next book covers Jamie's growing acceptance of Roger and Roger fighting to learn those skills and find his own place in their world.  I'm guessing we'll be getting some grown-up variations of the Jamie and Willie go a huntin' scenes from this season where Jamie is first bemused at what Roger as a man from 200 years later doesn't know before patiently setting about rectifying that so he doesn't get himself killed.

  • Love 4
Link to comment
4 hours ago, nodorothyparker said:

It's one of the more interesting twists on gender roles in this series for me that first Claire and then Bree have an easier time with time travel than Roger does and I think says quite a bit about changing expectations of those gender roles. 

Yes I really agree and you put it so much better than I can. 

Part of me hopes that the show does explore that aspect because it could be an interesting side aspect because Roger does face a completely different set of issues than Claire and Bree faced, with less reason for people not to cause him harm - he doesn't have someone from that time to act as a buffer sololy on his behalf as Jamie would put Claire and Bree before Roger and Roger, unlike Claire doesn't have a real practical skill to trade to get in people's good graces apart from his singing which he loses because of how he interacts with people innocently.  

4 hours ago, nodorothyparker said:

I'm guessing we'll be getting some grown-up variations of the Jamie and Willie go a huntin' scenes from this season where Jamie is first bemused at what Roger as a man from 200 years later doesn't know before patiently setting about rectifying that so he doesn't get himself killed.

Yet as Jamie is Bree's father and Roger has sort of already brushed off the tactics Jamie usually uses when dealing with younger or more inexperienced men it is possible the show may take it slow in that regard.  Remember when Roger replied 'What?'in the show to Jamie going on about Bree not needing a coward.  Sort of a 20th century response to an 18th century male goad.  Plus in the books Jamie does mention that Roger has the baggage of being descended from Dougal and Gellis, which may also cloud their dealings in the show.

If anything Murtagh maybe more sympathetic to Roger than Jamie, if they don't just use him in just the regulator plot.  He too came to North Carolina alone, has spent time as an indentured servant (so sort of like Roger with the Mohawk), had to build his own reputation after that, didn't have really a family until he bumped back into Jamie (who has never been without his family in North Carolina) and in a lot of ways Murtagh has spent more time with Bree than Jamie has.  He's the grandpa that Bree never had and possible a better mentor for Roger than Jamie at first as he navigates all the issues he would face.

Edited by fishpan
  • Love 2
Link to comment
On 2/9/2019 at 11:36 AM, RyeNeat said:

I found this forum seeking like minds about a massive character development divergence between the books and shows. Yet I haven’t really seen it mentioned here. Has anyone noticed that book and show Roger are completely different and that almost every edit/change the writers make from book Roger leads in a single direction?  He’s no longer strong, capable, masculine, or daring.

On one of the episode threads, I know I addressed some of these notions that Roger appears weak and incapable. I don't agree. 

Just the idea that he risked going through the stones to follow Bree showed that he had gumption and daring. In the book, we know that he had problems going through them "cleanly," unlike Claire and Bree. However, he tries more than once. Furthermore, he stands up to Steven Bonnet on the Gloriana, despite the fact Bonnet could've easily killed him, with no interference from his men, managing to save Morag and her child.  When he does fall back into Bonnet's clutches, he is threatened and likely would be overpowered if he refused to complete his "contract". Later, when he ends up sold to the Mohawk, he manages to escape during the journey, despite being in pretty bad shape. His hesitation in going through the stones, further illustrates the commitment he feels to Bree and his desire to see her safe in her own time. But for me, one of the bravest things he did was not only escaping the Mohawk *again* but deciding to return to help a fellow captive, knowing the odds were going to be completely against him. For a man who is ill-equipped for the 18th century, he manages to navigate the past, stay alive, and even risk himself for others. No, he's not a Highland warrior, but even some of the men from the 18th century who spend more time in America's colonial towns and cities at dining tables, ballrooms, and plays would have similar trouble keeping their head above water in similar situations.

  • Love 5
Link to comment
4 hours ago, Nidratime said:

On one of the episode threads, I know I addressed some of these notions that Roger appears weak and incapable. I don't agree. 

Just the idea that he risked going through the stones to follow Bree showed that he had gumption and daring. In the book, we know that he had problems going through them "cleanly," unlike Claire and Bree. However, he tries more than once. Furthermore, he stands up to Steven Bonnet on the Gloriana, despite the fact Bonnet could've easily killed him, with no interference from his men, managing to save Morag and her child.  When he does fall back into Bonnet's clutches, he is threatened and likely would be overpowered if he refused to complete his "contract". Later, when he ends up sold to the Mohawk, he manages to escape during the journey, despite being in pretty bad shape. His hesitation in going through the stones, further illustrates the commitment he feels to Bree and his desire to see her safe in her own time. But for me, one of the bravest things he did was not only escaping the Mohawk *again* but deciding to return to help a fellow captive, knowing the odds were going to be completely against him. For a man who is ill-equipped for the 18th century, he manages to navigate the past, stay alive, and even risk himself for others. No, he's not a Highland warrior, but even some of the men from the 18th century who spend more time in America's colonial towns and cities at dining tables, ballrooms, and plays would have similar trouble keeping their head above water in similar situations.

You're giving him a break because you know Roger from the books.  But the fact that so many non-book readers think that Roger is weak and helpless means that the show has failed in its portrayal of him.  Roger is extremely unpopular out there in the world.  If the only Roger I knew was from the show I wouldn't be all that impressed with him, either.  Yeah, he makes a couple of brave decisions but overall, he really does seem kinda pathetic.  

  • Love 1
Link to comment
1 hour ago, toolazy said:

 Yeah, he makes a couple of brave decisions but overall, he really does seem kinda pathetic.  

I don't find him pathetic, I actually find Roger the most relatable time travelling character in the show actually because he isn't so sodding perfect and he cops it from his own and other mistakes.  

With Claire, well she just happened to know all the healing plants in the world before she fell through the stones and lucks out by having Dougal, a man with major influence, save her ass from Jack Randall and is completely incapable of getting herself to Inverness.  What would have happened to her if she hadn't been a nurse with a sideline in herbology?

Gellis is nuttier than a homicidal fruitloop.  But she prepared and knew what skills she would need to survive and knows she has to get in the bed of a well connected man.

Bree lucks out when she goes through by encountering Loaghaire and then is ferried and given money to travel by Ian who just takes her word who she is.  If Jenny had been there in the show, well can she her going mental about who, what, where and when considering I can't mind in the show that Jamie and Claire telling her that Bree existed.

Roger, sure he isn't as handy as Jamie and Murtagh but has the sense about when to push things unlike Ottertooth.  Who thought he would just come back and the Mohawk would just do as they were told.  But out of the two which is still alive - Roger.  In the end Ottertooth came back and didn't save his people, but Roger he had the sense to not only get himself passage by himself but kept himself, Morag and wee Jemmy were alive. 

Because what else did you expect Roger to do?  Take the ship?  Claire can't save slaves in the face of a mob, but we expect Roger to take on a whole ship? Hell even Jamie couldn't take a ship by himself and found himself confined when Clarie got pressganged.   Or do you want him to take on a Mohawk village who are probably guarding him more over his actions with the pyre?  He had one good arm and a water bucket not a 50 calibre machine gun.

Because in the end we see Roger in a bad way - which is what most likely would happen to people with little to no money and no connections and little to no skills that would be marketable in that time zone. 

So what he seems depressed when Claire and Jamie find him.  He's not long after witnessing the horrific deaths of 2 people which he faciliated, he caused a baby to become an orphan.  So what do you expect from him - to brush off what would probably be the first time he witnessed violent deaths?  Especially when he was involved.  Claire is allowed to have PTSD, Jamie is allowed to break at the hand of Jack Randall so isn't Roger allowed to have something similar after he helps burn someone alive?

We do see him stand up to Jamie, even though he is in no fit state to do much when Jamie is being a testosterone filled bully.  Hell Jamie in parts was being as bad as both his uncles in that scene and guess what it backfired - Roger didn't tuck in his tail and do what he was told and in the end he didn't piss off either.  Also we see Claire and Jamie in the show abandon Roger in the middle of nowhere with a busted arm and them having little real knowledge if he has the skills to survive considering he is a history lecturer in Oxford from 200 years in the future.  That's nice isn't it.

No-one comes out clean in that situation and Roger may come off pathetic to you because you don't want Jamie to look bad because when you unpack things Jamie's actions with Roger cost Bree her shot on going backbecause if Jamie hadn't beaten Roger then Roger and Bree would have had met at Fraser's Ridge and decided if they were to be together and even if they hadn't they had time to get Bree back to the 20th century.  But Jamie beat a man half to death without the man in question knowing why and kept quiet about it.  Jamie cost Bree her shot at going home and when he found out his mistake he slut shamed her infront of her mother those actions are on Jamie, not because Roger not being a manly 18th century man.

  • Love 4
Link to comment
13 minutes ago, fishpan said:

-one comes out clean in that situation and Roger may come off pathetic to you because you don't want Jamie to look bad because when you unpack things Jamie's actions with Roger cost Bree her shot on going backbecause if Jamie hadn't beaten Roger then Roger and Bree would have had met at Fraser's Ridge and decided if they were to be together and even if they hadn't they had time to get Bree back to the 20th century.  But Jamie beat a man half to death without the man in question knowing why and kept quiet about it.  Jamie cost Bree her shot at going home and when he found out his mistake he slut shamed her infront of her mother those actions are on Jamie, not because Roger not being a manly 18th century man.

Um, no.  My feelings about Roger's portrayal have nothing to do with Jamie.  This isn't a zero sum game - there is plenty of blame to go around during the Great Misunderstanding and Jamie deserves all that he gets.  Honestly, this wasn't really a good look for any of them, not even Claire.  

Link to comment
36 minutes ago, toolazy said:

Um, no.  My feelings about Roger's portrayal have nothing to do with Jamie.  This isn't a zero sum game - there is plenty of blame to go around during the Great Misunderstanding and Jamie deserves all that he gets.  Honestly, this wasn't really a good look for any of them, not even Claire.  

Really? Nothing to do with Jamie?

I've seen a lot of people go on about Roger being pathetic.  He's a character who we are seeing growing and changing in a sort of relatable way. So we will see how he goes and no he's never going to be the Indiana Jones of Inverness but has the potential to learn with bumps and scraps.  But who is his comparable in the show - Jamie.  

Jamie is so wonderful in ways that you kind of feel that Jamie's mistakes are also the fault of the other side, in this case Roger has his part in the Great Misunderstanding because in the show he didn't open his mouth and protest his innocence to a crime he didn't know had happened.  His actions at the Mohawk village, well Roger is injured in the gauntlet which is just 'pathetic' as Jamie and party go to rescue him.  And he is sitting in the hut when Claire and Jamie comes for him - well he's injured, isn't fluent in the language and he's just basically killed 2 people.  Escape, logistically isn't going to happen at that point. 

Roger doesn't jump and go straight back to Bree.  He has been hit with a shower of anvils and Jamie acting like a bullying ass.  Even if he was completely together, pride and distrust in the face of Jamie may have caused Roger to not want to head back with Jamie and Claire.  But it is easier to say Roger is simply weak than say Roger is emotionally done at that point and Jamie isn't helping the situation in any way shape or form by channeling Dougal and Colum.

Also that doesn't change the fact that Claire and Jamie left an injured man in a dangerous environment,.  Now I've seen folk go on about Roger not choosing to go back straight away and that is weak - but really Claire and Jamie didn't have to leave the guy in the woods.  Although we did see Roger make it to River Run on his own.  A place he doesn't know if Bree will still be and where he has never been before.  Also ready to face Jamie again but more able to deal with the bull headed Fraser, which in a lot of ways does take skill, especially considering for a lot of that ride Roger would have been one handed and he's riding a bloody big horse and not driving his wee Morris Minor.

He isn't perfect but he's doing okay considering he's a 20th century man in an environment he never expected to find himself.

Edited by fishpan
  • Love 1
Link to comment
5 minutes ago, fishpan said:

Really? Nothing to do with Jamie?

Really.  Why is that so hard to believe?  I should know how I feel about the characters and I think Jamie acts like an ass on multiple occasions during these... events. I'm not one of the people that buys into that King of Men schtick.  

I'm sorry that I (and countless others) disagree with you (and countless others) on how Roger's character comes off in the show but there it is.  We're just going to have to agree to disagree. No one is going to change anyone's mind.  

  • Love 1
Link to comment
11 hours ago, Nidratime said:

On one of the episode threads, I know I addressed some of these notions that Roger appears weak and incapable. I don't agree. 

Just the idea that he risked going through the stones to follow Bree showed that he had gumption and daring. In the book, we know that he had problems going through them "cleanly," unlike Claire and Bree. However, he tries more than once. Furthermore, he stands up to Steven Bonnet on the Gloriana, despite the fact Bonnet could've easily killed him, with no interference from his men, managing to save Morag and her child.  When he does fall back into Bonnet's clutches, he is threatened and likely would be overpowered if he refused to complete his "contract". Later, when he ends up sold to the Mohawk, he manages to escape during the journey, despite being in pretty bad shape. His hesitation in going through the stones, further illustrates the commitment he feels to Bree and his desire to see her safe in her own time. But for me, one of the bravest things he did was not only escaping the Mohawk *again* but deciding to return to help a fellow captive, knowing the odds were going to be completely against him. For a man who is ill-equipped for the 18th century, he manages to navigate the past, stay alive, and even risk himself for others. No, he's not a Highland warrior, but even some of the men from the 18th century who spend more time in America's colonial towns and cities at dining tables, ballrooms, and plays would have similar trouble keeping their head above water in similar situations.

So much this. And it's not just that he went back but that he had the fortitude to hasten the priest's death. Were I in that situation, that's what I would want to do, but I'm not sure I would be able to go through with it. And I can imagine that he was roundly rewarded by his captors.

I'm of two minds about how Show Roger comes off. I can't unread the books, so I can't honestly say I wouldn't have the same reaction as many/most of the nonbook readers. I do think Roger is more realistically portrayed than the other characters, who rival Wile E. Coyote for bouncing back from adversity. I can't let myself think too much about the saga of Jamie, who survived two (2!) whippings in close succession that would have killed most people, if not on the spot than from the inevitable infection; came back from the physical and psychological abuse he suffered at the hands of Jack Randall; overcame hideous injuries at Culloden, including a lengthy ride to Lallybroch in a rickety cart (IIRC);  spent years in a cave; endured I forget how many years in a prison under wretched conditions--I don't care how great the weekly meals with LJ were, he would have been riddled with lice and suffering from malnutrition from the rat cuisine. It beggers belief. I think he also had some sort of near-death experience on the ship to America. And he still looks great (pace to those who can't get past the wig)!

Roger looks and acts like someone who has been beaten within an inch of his life and walked 700 miles at the end of a rope, all the while not being entirely sure that his beloved wasn't partially responsible. I do think he suffers as a realistically represented character dropped into a show peopled with preternatural survivors, not excluding Stephen Bonnet, the Forest Gump of the eighteenth century.

  • Love 6
Link to comment

I had a thought that may be moot, because if it happened we wouldn’t have much a plot line.....

Why did no one suggest a newly pregnant Bree go back through the stones alone, while Claire & Co go searching for Roger. If they found Roger alive they could rescue him and send him home (to be with Bree or not, his choice). If Roger had died on the journey etc Bree would still be back in the 20th century. A far better place to be a single mother. 

Was this never suggested because Diana wanted her characters in the past?

Link to comment
On 2/10/2019 at 4:20 AM, fishpan said:

Sorry girl you know something caused a rift between your parents and they moved to a new continent afterwards and you find a newspaper clipping stating your mother disappeared for three years, with no sight or sound of her to and then was found wandering in the middle of nowhere dressed like Laura Doon and wittering on about a battle from 200 years ago, 6 months before you were born.   Well you thinking you are the result of a grand whirlwind affair should not be your first thought.  Thinking your mother may have been held hostage and raped for three years by a mad man who brainwashed her and your parents trying their best afterwards may have been your first.  I know 1968 was pre Patty Hearst but Bree was a college student.

Yes I understood Bree being upset and confused when finding the article, but she was an adult woman (not a kid). Knowing your parents were married, your Mom disappeared for three years and showed back up pregnant by another man, AND her husband not only took her back but loved you and raised as his own- world wind affair isn’t where my mind would go either; I would think something traumatic like a kidnapping or rape happened to her. She was lost for THREE YEARS. 

  • Love 1
Link to comment
1 hour ago, Scarlett45 said:

I had a thought that may be mute, because if it happened we wouldn’t have much a plot line.....

Why did no one suggest a newly pregnant Bree go back through the stones alone, while Claire & Co go searching for Roger. If they found Roger alive they could rescue him and send him home (to be with Bree or not, his choice). If Roger had died on the journey etc Bree would still be back in the 20th century. A far better place to be a single mother. 

Was this never suggested because Diana wanted her characters in the past?

I think you mean “moot.” But to answer your question-that’s not the story Gabaldon wanted to tell.

Link to comment
3 hours ago, Scarlett45 said:

I had a thought that may be moot, because if it happened we wouldn’t have much a plot line.....

Why did no one suggest a newly pregnant Bree go back through the stones alone, while Claire & Co go searching for Roger. If they found Roger alive they could rescue him and send him home (to be with Bree or not, his choice). If Roger had died on the journey etc Bree would still be back in the 20th century. A far better place to be a single mother. 

Was this never suggested because Diana wanted her characters in the past?

"Because plot". You might as well ask why Bree and Roger didn't travel together to Fraser's Ridge when they met up, tell Jamie and Claire about the fire, then go and find some gemstones to travel back with if J&C didn't have any.  More plot from having them bicker and be separated leading to rape-and-paternity-drama and The Misunderstanding (I don't object to the bicker - Roger had it coming - but what it led to...ugh.  Gabaldon does a massive swerve from the first couple of books into full-on melodrama).

  • Love 1
Link to comment
7 hours ago, Scarlett45 said:

Yes I understood Bree being upset and confused when finding the article, but she was an adult woman (not a kid). Knowing your parents were married, your Mom disappeared for three years and showed back up pregnant by another man, AND her husband not only took her back but loved you and raised as his own- world wind affair isn’t where my mind would go either; I would think something traumatic like a kidnapping or rape happened to her. She was lost for THREE YEARS

Exactly!

I know that when Claire turned up in the 1948 it was a time when something like that was harder to imagine or voice, but considering the nature of her disappearance, her state, her story and more importantly her dress to have no-one say that kidnapping and being held hostage by a complete nut job was not a possibility?  If they had played it that they don't want to voice it and stick to the idea that Claire ran off with someone because it down plays their guilt about not looking hard enough for her fine in the face of that possibility then fine but it was never even really worked through in 1948, unless I missed swathes of story.

But then when Bree finds out in 1968 and not to have her even consider something like that when her mother starts going on about time travel in the face of the other facts?  Just because Bree was upset, is very strange.  As having Bree take a breath, listening and then entertaining that Claire may have been held against her will and then suffered Stockholm syndrome makes a lot of sense, especially in the face of the time travel story and how Bree said Claire lived in another world and why her parents marriage was the way it was.  It's a lot better than Bree going on about Claire having delusions.

Now, I know they were playing the idea that Roger was pulling the idea at that point that Jamie and time travel was a story that Claire 'believed' but come out, say it at some point and not have the only way the idea is played with is a sketch of Jamie on a police notice board in 1945 is kind of silly.  We aren't idiots, its a show with violence and we are still watching so we can take that until they saw Gellis went through the stones that those around Claire (outside Mrs Graham) could have believed that that a possible logical explanation wasn't time travel but a mad Scot out on the moors outside Inverness who was living a life like something akin to the 18th century version of the hills have eyes. 

Edited by fishpan
  • Love 1
Link to comment
6 hours ago, pootlus said:

  Gabaldon does a massive swerve from the first couple of books into full-on melodrama).

This is so true.  I can't tell you how my eyebrows rose to the ceiling when that pirate ship hove into view in Voyager.  That book started so well and then suddenly it all went completely bonkers.

TV series followed in much the same way.  The last time I really enjoyed Outlander as much as in season one was episode 304, after those first four episodes the quality just plummeted (for me anyway).  I did quite like 308 but that's it really.  I do still watch but I just crave getting back to the standards of the first season.

  • Love 2
Link to comment
23 hours ago, Scarlett45 said:

I had a thought that may be moot, because if it happened we wouldn’t have much a plot line.....

Why did no one suggest a newly pregnant Bree go back through the stones alone, while Claire & Co go searching for Roger. If they found Roger alive they could rescue him and send him home (to be with Bree or not, his choice). If Roger had died on the journey etc Bree would still be back in the 20th century. A far better place to be a single mother. 

Was this never suggested because Diana wanted her characters in the past?

Are you talking about the book or the show? Because in the book, they discussed that very thing but ruled it out because of timing.  They didn't know yet about the stones in America so Bree would have had to sail back to Scotland, find her way to the stones and go through. Ships don't sail in winter.  By the time she got a ship and got over to Scotland, she would either be cutting it super close or it would be too late, I don't exactly remember. 

So it's not like DG completely glossed over the possibility.  The idea was considered and then rejected. 

  • Love 2
Link to comment
1 minute ago, toolazy said:

Are you talking about the book or the show? Because in the book, they discussed that very thing but ruled it out because of timing.  They didn't know yet about the stones in America so Bree would have had to sail back to Scotland, find her way to the stones and go through. Ships don't sail in winter.  By the time she got a ship and got over to Scotland, she would either be cutting it super close or it would be too late, I don't exactly remember. 

So it's not like DG completely glossed over the possibility.  The idea was considered and then rejected. 

Thank you! You’re right. Duh-Ships don’t sail in the winter and Bree would’ve been extremely close to her due date trying to make that journey. 

I did recall that in the show we didn’t yet know about the stones in mainland colonies (Claire knew about the ones in Jamaica but same scenario). 

Link to comment
5 minutes ago, Scarlett45 said:

Thank you! You’re right. Duh-Ships don’t sail in the winter and Bree would’ve been extremely close to her due date trying to make that journey. 

I did recall that in the show we didn’t yet know about the stones in mainland colonies (Claire knew about the ones in Jamaica but same scenario). 

Yes, I think they also discussed Jamaica, too.  In their place, I would be really leery of going through unfamiliar portals.  Were they stones or was it a pool of water in a cave? I speed-read through that part of the book because it's both creepy and maddening. 

Link to comment
On 2/11/2019 at 4:47 PM, fishpan said:

Roger doesn't jump and go straight back to Bree.  He has been hit with a shower of anvils and Jamie acting like a bullying ass.  Even if he was completely together, pride and distrust in the face of Jamie may have caused Roger to not want to head back with Jamie and Claire.  But it is easier to say Roger is simply weak than say Roger is emotionally done at that point and Jamie isn't helping the situation in any way shape or form by channeling Dougal and Colum.

Also that doesn't change the fact that Claire and Jamie left an injured man in a dangerous environment,.  Now I've seen folk go on about Roger not choosing to go back straight away and that is weak - but really Claire and Jamie didn't have to leave the guy in the woods.  Although we did see Roger make it to River Run on his own.  A place he doesn't know if Bree will still be and where he has never been before.  Also ready to face Jamie again but more able to deal with the bull headed Fraser, which in a lot of ways does take skill, especially considering for a lot of that ride Roger would have been one handed and he's riding a bloody big horse and not driving his wee Morris Minor.

He isn't perfect but he's doing okay considering he's a 20th century man in an environment he never expected to find himself.

I agree with so much of what you said.  I think why Roger didn't immediately go to River Run with Jamie and Claire is one of the things that most fans misunderstood, and that drives me bonkers!  So many people have criticized Roger for taking so long to decide and ask why he could ride along side Jamie and Claire while he thought about things.

I think most people are forgetting that Roger isn't trying to decide whether or not he can still love Bree or raise a child that isn't his.  He's wondering if he can accept living in the 18th century indefinitely and possible forever.  River Run is in one direction, and the stones that Roger found are in a completely different direction.  If Roger starts traveling with Jamie and Claire, he'll be going away from the stones.  While Jamie was being a bit of a baby/bully when speaking to Roger, he wasn't entirely wrong (and Claire said it better).  If Roger isn't prepared to be a husband to Bree and a father to Jemmy and live in the 18th Century, it's better that he go now rather than get Bree's hopes up by going to River Run, only to break her heart again and leave.  They made it clear that Roger needs to not come to River Run unless he had decided to stay.  If he isn't ready to turn his back on the stones (possibly forever), he needs to wait until he is.

I do disagree that Roger is responsible for the 2 deaths.  That situation was already in motion, and I don't think Roger did anything to influence the outcome.  Maybe by fueling the fire the girlfriend found it easier to join the priest on the fire, but I suspect she would have done that at some point.  If I remember correctly from the book (and it's been awhile), Roger had nothing to do with that story other than be an ear for the priest while he was in the hut.

  • Love 1
Link to comment
On 2/13/2019 at 4:33 PM, Scarlett45 said:

Thank you! You’re right. Duh-Ships don’t sail in the winter and Bree would’ve been extremely close to her due date trying to make that journey. 

I did recall that in the show we didn’t yet know about the stones in mainland colonies (Claire knew about the ones in Jamaica but same scenario). 

It seems to me they did spend more time discussing this in the book.  Maybe they didn't want to spend too much time on it in the show.  I remember Claire being very urgent at first.  "Bree, you have to go back NOW!"  And I remember thinking, "Um, she literally just arrived on the Ridge!"  But I didn't realize that Claire was concerned that a baby might not make it through the stones.  (Probably just one of the many, many, many details I missed while reading the first time.)

Link to comment
(edited)
On 7/7/2016 at 3:05 PM, DittyDotDot said:

This is always an interesting question for me since I kinda binge almost any show I watch anymore. I mean, I don't watch the whole season in a day, but usually do batch up a couple episodes to watch together. That's how I watched S1--probably did the whole season in 4 to 5 weeks. I find it's easier to let annoyances go when you jump into the next episode, but you tend to forget about some of the more poignant moments too. It could be that binge watchers would notice the lack of intimacy more than the folks who watched it in real time and spent each week thinking about the show and those few moments?

I really don't know.

This is obviously a convo from several years ago ( 3?), but I wanted to weigh in that I think bingeing is better than waiting a week, it makes the season smoother & you don’t forget about what happened 5 episodes ago but is now back in play. I did the first 2 seasons within 3-4 weeks. ( I read the books after that). I also never questioned a lack of intimacy in season 2 ( although I think there was much less sex shown), & their parting at the end was of that season was gut wrenching. I also think that those of us that watched it more than once paid more attention to every detail of their relationship than those viewers who only watch once.

The quote below was supposed to be added to this post! 

I think everyone involved with the show ( producers, writers, actors, etc)pays attention to the viewer complaints as season 3 had many more sex scenes than season 2. And the big complaint of season 4 was Jamie’s wig bangs, & I note that in our first pics from season 5 those bangs are MIA! 

Edited by Cdh20
  • Love 1
Link to comment
(edited)
On 7/7/2016 at 9:28 AM, ulkis said:

Based on the reactions from non-book-readers, overall they don't seem to be feeling short changed. 

Edited by Cdh20
Trying to fix a mistake.
Link to comment
On 7/8/2016 at 2:49 PM, WatchrTina said:

However, regarding the need for a shirtless Jamie minimum -- I support this initiative.  Where do I sign the petition?

Sign me up ! Not enough shirtless Jamie is my season 4 complaint!

Link to comment

I finally was able to binge S3 and S4 on STARZ online, which I had canceled.  Oh, my.  I think they did a fabulous job bringing these two dense books (VOY and DOA) to the screen.  I love the evolution of Jamie -- he is not always right, but he owns his mistakes.  In the books, I often had to settle myself in some of his more idiotic moments (sometimes his decision making at 45 years old was WORSE than it had been at 23), but in the show, the writers appear to have smoothed out a lot of those moments.  I kind of dreaded both the not telling Claire straightaway about Laoghaire bit and the selling Roger to the Indians bit because they smacked of plot device and not plot.  But both instances, the series left me with the feeling that although these were both bad decisions in the moment, I could see the why of it.  Much better.  

Overall, I liked the changes they made to the books.  I am as on board for the story as I ever was, and I'm looking forward to S5. 

I won't, however, follow the episodes on this board.  It very nearly ruined the watching experience for me.  

  • Useful 1
  • Love 1
Link to comment
6 minutes ago, Ziggy said:

Has Diana even finished writing Bees?  I know I'm not the only one here eagerly anticipating the release.

Nope. Like I posted in the season finale thread, I think it was? Or maybe the episode before--how she's been working on Buik Nine for close to six years now. And @Haleth pointed out that she had had a bad fall sometime in between and stopped writing? But she's written some of it, because in the buik thread for Bees, another poster was posting excerpts and I know one of them was a conversation between Roger and Jamie about Claire's rape.

Who knows when she'll finish writing it.

Link to comment
11 hours ago, ruby24 said:

This is officially going to be the longest gap between books.

Right!?!  I was planning to re-read “A Breath of Snow and Ashes.” Now that I’ve seen season five, it makes sense to re-read “An Echo in the Bone” also. I don’t read these books fast, but there’s a good chance I will finish “Written in My Own Heart’s Blood” before anything new comes our way.

Link to comment
14 hours ago, GHScorpiosRule said:

Nope. Like I posted in the season finale thread, I think it was? Or maybe the episode before--how she's been working on Buik Nine for close to six years now. And @Haleth pointed out that she had had a bad fall sometime in between and stopped writing? But she's written some of it, because in the buik thread for Bees, another poster was posting excerpts and I know one of them was a conversation between Roger and Jamie about Claire's rape.

Who knows when she'll finish writing it.

I didn’t notice your post about it. Diana’s been posting daily lines for years, But I never read them. I thought she was planning to finish writing sometime in 2019. I wasn’t holding my breath on the publishing date for last year, but I did think it would come out in 2020. Don’t really think that’s going to happen anymore.

Link to comment
17 hours ago, GHScorpiosRule said:

Nope. Like I posted in the season finale thread, I think it was? Or maybe the episode before--how she's been working on Buik Nine for close to six years now. And @Haleth pointed out that she had had a bad fall sometime in between and stopped writing? But she's written some of it, because in the buik thread for Bees, another poster was posting excerpts and I know one of them was a conversation between Roger and Jamie about Claire's rape.

Who knows when she'll finish writing it.

On her Facebook page she said she is close to finishing.  I think people were hoping for release this year but I'd be surprised.  

Link to comment
(edited)
On 5/19/2020 at 11:48 AM, toolazy said:

On her Facebook page she said she is close to finishing.  I think people were hoping for release this year but I'd be surprised.  

There were many people hoping for a release last year!

I think it's especially hard to wait right now, because we don't know if/when they will begin filming Season 6.  I'm really the wrong person to talk about waiting, though, because I didn't begin reading the books until after Moby was published.  I've never had to wait for a book before.

Edited by Ziggy
  • Love 2
Link to comment
1 hour ago, Ziggy said:

There were many people hoping for a release last year!

I think it's especially hard to wait right now, because we don't know if/when they will begin filming Season 6.  I'm really the wrong person to talk about waiting, though, because I didn't begin reading the books until after Moby was published.  I've never had to wait for a book before.

Yeah, this is the first book I've had to wait for, too.  It's not a surprise that this one took longer than the other ones, given how much work she's done to promote the show over the last several years.  

  • Love 1
Link to comment

So, I just started rereading A Breath of Snow and Ashes, and I'm wondering, what will be the main plot of Season 6?  Do you think it will be about the Christie's?  Will they just skip this book and move on to An Echo in the Bone?

Link to comment
On 5/22/2020 at 10:58 AM, Ziggy said:

So, I just started rereading A Breath of Snow and Ashes, and I'm wondering, what will be the main plot of Season 6?  Do you think it will be about the Christie's?  Will they just skip this book and move on to An Echo in the Bone?

I would love for the Christie's to be left out completely. They will need someone to post the obituary in the paper for Brianna and Roger to find in the future, but it wouldn't need to be Tom Christie.  I'm guessing Bree will have Mandy, and they will need to make decisions about her medical condition.  We'll also need to hear about what happened with Ian and Works With Her Hands.  Richard Brown will need to exact revenge on the Frasers, and I'm guessing he'll be there with Wendigo Donner looking for gems when the house catches fire.  That's really only a few episodes worth of material, so they'll probably jump into Book 7. 

They could create a season arc for Ian, where we learn about what happened with him early on and then by the end of the season he could meet Rachel.  

Gah, if Book 9 takes much longer for release, the show will outpace the source material.  

 

  • Love 1
Link to comment

I started reading the Fiery Cross for the first time just as this season was ending. I love how the scenes are coming to life as they were presented to me. I am also on rewatch with my daughter (she likes to binge it all at once, after her uni year is done). The book has so many characters, I think the show has done a good job of paring down the amount of people, & leaving out scenes we don't really  need. And no wonder Fergus never says anything in the show, he hardly says anything in the books either (rolls eyes). I will say the book did a better job of "Better To Marry Than Burn" with Jamie & Claire hot  for each other all day long leading up to the barn scene, but even Sam & Cait know that was a fail (On rewatch I enjoyed it more).  Thank goodness there was no one  licking Claire's toes though, sometimes those showrunners know just what to leave out after all. 

  • Love 2
Link to comment
On 5/27/2020 at 12:05 AM, SassAndSnacks said:

They could create a season arc for Ian, where we learn about what happened with him early on and then by the end of the season he could meet Rachel.  

I flicked over 95% of the flashbacks to Ian and his ex-wife (if that's the right term), it was just so dull.  There wasn't much description of life in a Native American community from what I remember, which would have at least been interesting.  I found the Quakers were pretty dull too - it's a shame because Ian himself is a great character, he just seems to get dull plotlines after he offers to exchange himself for Roger.

I hope they get two more seasons to wrap everything up but I wouldn't miss huge chunks of the later books.  Mind you the show has done a great job making book plotlines more interesting and relevant (having Murtagh be leader of the regulators being the example that springs to mind) so who knows.  Maybe they could make all that army stuff interesting...?

  • Love 3
Link to comment
On 5/22/2020 at 7:58 AM, Ziggy said:

So, I just started rereading A Breath of Snow and Ashes, and I'm wondering, what will be the main plot of Season 6?  Do you think it will be about the Christie's?  Will they just skip this book and move on to An Echo in the Bone?

I don't remember what else happens in that book - those later books all run together in my brain.  I'd love to see the Christies dispensed with, but I'm not optimistic.  

  • Love 1
Link to comment
On 5/26/2020 at 10:30 AM, Cdh20 said:

Thank goodness there was no one  licking Claire's toes though, sometimes those showrunners know just what to leave out after all. 

I actually really like Fiery Cross.  It's up next on my re-read list, and I'm excited to see what renewed impressions I have of it.  This particular part still confuses me, and I read through it several times (for research purposes, you know.) WAS it Jamie?  That part was never clarified.  I mean, it still grosses me out even if it was JAMMF, but...yeah...that pause was me gagging.

On 6/1/2020 at 10:16 AM, pootlus said:

I flicked over 95% of the flashbacks to Ian and his ex-wife (if that's the right term), it was just so dull.  There wasn't much description of life in a Native American community from what I remember, which would have at least been interesting.  I found the Quakers were pretty dull too - it's a shame because Ian himself is a great character, he just seems to get dull plotlines after he offers to exchange himself for Roger.

Oh, goodness YES. I like the dynamic between Denzel and Claire, and I think it's wonderful how much he respects her skill and knowledge.  But Rachel...so dull.  Why is everyone in love with her?  Ian is such an exciting character - brave, wild, ruthless, haunted.  He gets Rachel?  For real, William can have her.  #IanDeservesBetter  And Dottie...I can't even start with the total snooze-fest that is Dottie.

On 6/1/2020 at 10:16 AM, pootlus said:

Mind you the show has done a great job making book plotlines more interesting and relevant (having Murtagh be leader of the regulators being the example that springs to mind) so who knows.

Yes to this, too!  I was never a big Marsali fan until Lauren Lyle came along.  Maybe they will cast someone dynamic to add depth to Rachel that we don't have in the book, and I'll like her more.  

  • Love 3
Link to comment

For me the casting of secondary characters has brought them to life in a great way- Angus, Rupert, Fergus ( both), Young Ian. Murtagh & Marsali are probably the best examples. 

  • Love 4
Link to comment
11 hours ago, Cdh20 said:

For me the casting of secondary characters has brought them to life in a great way- Angus, Rupert, Fergus ( both), Young Ian. Murtagh & Marsali are probably the best examples. 

That is so true! I really am impressed with the job the show writers have done. There are definitely aspects of the books I wish they could have included, but I do think they have been given a very challenging task. Overall, I think they have done an amazing job!

Link to comment
On 8/8/2014 at 10:17 PM, WatchrTina said:

So I hear (via Reddit) that there are some readers who are up in arms because Frank "goes downtown" on Claire in the 1945 Castle Leoch scene.  I do recall from the book that Jamie does that and that it's a first for Claire but I have to say, the TV approach is much more realistic.  I mean, come on!  Book!Jamie is a virgin who has acquired most of his sex education from watching horses.  He even admits he didn't know you could do it facing each other.  So the idea that he would be inspired to *ahem* go yodeling in the gully all on his own is a bit silly.  Much more realistic if they have TV!Claire introduce him to the concept since, clearly, she likes it.  

He had some education from the boys, and got some advice the night before, at least in the show.  It was interesting to me that he had heard from them that women "don't like it."  Doesn't say much for the boys, though, so maybe they had little knowledge to impart.  In the show, Rupert and Angus are all about it being funny and casual.  Same with Murtagh, his encounters seems casual until Jocasta - though he was in love with Ellen, so he didn't get past that, it seems, dedicating his life to Ellen's son.  

Link to comment
On 9/3/2014 at 6:57 PM, Glaze Crazy said:

To continue this idea, I would say that Jamie might not fully understand Claire's POV until he learns she is from a different era.  So, even though at the time of the "incident" he has some appreciation of her reaction from what he knows about her at that moment, once he's aware that her POV is a product of her era, he completely understands that their relationship has a different basis, especially since she chooses to stay with him once she is given the opportunity to go back through the stones.

It is hard to be in Jamie's shoes there.   Imagine someone from the 23rd century judging us, being horrified at the things we do that seem normal to us but are barbaric to them.  Adjusting to that is not going to be easy.  Jamie is quite open minded about it mostly.  Women in college, in bikinis, no corporal punishment, and on top of that, Claire doesn't explain it verra well.  She seems to just expect him to go along with it.  She doesn't even tell him the her problem with the spanking is that it's not cool in her era.  It's amazing he got the point that he should not do it again and did that little oath ceremony.  It seems he decided not to do it in 18th century terms, because she doesn't like it.  

Link to comment

Probably the wrong thread for this, but Diana is writing a prequel?  Is this news or has she already talked about it?  She mentioned it on Twitter today.  I just wish she’d finish book 9 😩

Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...