The Fiery Cross

Abridged
Author: Diana Gabaldon
Narrator: Geraldine James
Genres: Romance, Fiction, Historical Fiction, Historical
Publisher: Random House (Audio)
Date: November 2001
Length: 9 hours
Ratings:
  • Book Rating: 4/5
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

In the ten years since her debut novel Outlander was published, Diana Gabaldon has garnered a fiercely dedicated audience. Propelled by bookseller enthusiasm and word-of-mouth recommendations, the saga of 18th-century Scotsman Jamie Fraser and his 20th-century wife, Claire Randall, enjoys an extraordinary rate of sale.

Now comes "The Fiery Cross," the long-anticipated new novel in the saga. . . . The year is 1771, and the American War of Independence is coming. Jamie's wife has told him so, thus it must be true, for hers is a gift of dreadful prophecy -- a time traveler's certain knowledge. Caught between his oath to the Crown and the changing times, Jamie stands in the shadow of the fiery cross -- a standard that leads nowhere but to the bloody brink of war.

Reviews (5)

The Fiery Cross

Written by Anonymous from Big Lake, MN on October 3rd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I was not impressed. I actually was looking forward to being done with it so that I could send it back. Disappointing!

Love this series!

Written by Noelle Dunn on February 23rd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

This is my least favorite in the Outlander series, but it is still a great novel. Diana Gabaldon has created fascinating characters and a vivid story. I enjoyed listening to it as much as I enjoyed reading it.

Not her best work

Written by Anonymous on September 22nd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 2/5

If this were the beginning of the saga, I don't think it would hook me the way the earlier books did. Since I am securely hooked on this Outlander series, however, I am sticking with it until it ends.

Firey Cross

Written by Sharon S on May 11th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I adore these stories! Cannot get enough and am dying ot get the second half of the series!

Fiery Cross

Written by Mary Schweitzer on August 5th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I absolutely loved the outlander series. It was very entertaining, good history, great fantasy, wonderful love story, etc.

Author Details

Author Details

Gabaldon, Diana

To millions of fans, Diana Gabaldon is the creator of a complex, original, and utterly compelling amalgam of 18th-century romantic adventure and 20th-century science fiction. To the publishing industry, she's a grassroots-marketing phenomenon. And to would-be writers everywhere who worry that they don't have the time or expertise to do what they love, Gabaldon is nothing short of an inspiration.

Gabaldon wrote her first novel while juggling the demands of motherhood and career: in between her job as an ecology professor, she also had a part-time gig writing freelance software reviews. Gabaldon had never written fiction before, and didn't intend to publish this first novel, which she decided to call Outlander. This, she decided, would be her "practice novel". Worried that she might not be able to pull a plot and characters out of thin air, she settled on a historical novel because "it's easier to look things up than to make them up entirely."

The impulse to set her novel in 18th-century Scotland didn't stem -- as some fans have assumed—from a desire to explore her own familial roots (in fact, Gabaldon isn't even Scottish). Rather, it came from watching an episode of the British sci-fi series Dr. Who and becoming smitten with a handsome time traveler in a kilt. A time-travel element crept into Gabaldon's own book only after she realized her wisecracking female lead couldn't have come from anywhere but the 20th century. The resulting love affair between an intelligent, mature, sexually experienced woman and a charismatic, brave, virginal young man turned the conventions of historical romance upside-down.

Gabaldon has said her books were hard to market at first because they were impossible to categorize neatly. Were they historical romances? Sci-fi adventure stories? Literary fiction? Whatever their genre (Gabaldon eventually proffered the term "historical fantasias"), they eventually found their audience, and it turned out to be a staggeringly huge one.

Even before the publication of Outlander, Gabaldon had an online community of friends who'd read excerpts and were waiting eagerly for more. (In fact, her cohorts at the CompuServe Literary Forum helped hook her up with an agent.) Once the book was released, word kept spreading, both on the Internet and off, and Gabaldon kept writing sequels. (When her fourth book, "Drums of Autumn," was released, it debuted at No. 1 on the Wall Street Journal bestseller list, and her publisher, Delacorte, raced to add more copies to their initial print run of 155,000.)

With her books consistently topping the bestseller lists, it's apparent that Gabaldon's appeal lies partly in her ability to bulldoze the formulaic conventions of popular fiction. Salon writer Gavin McNett noted approvingly, "She simply doesn't pay attention to genre or precedent, and doesn't seem to care that identifying with Claire puts women in the role of the mysterious stranger, with Jamie -- no wimp in any regard -- as the romantic 'heroine."'

In between Outlander novels, Gabaldon also writes historical mysteries featuring Lord John Grey, a popular, if minor, character from the series, and is working on a contemporary mystery series. Meanwhile, the author's formidable fan base keeps growing, as evidenced by the expanding list of Gabaldon chat rooms, mailing lists, fan clubs and web sites -- some of them complete with fetching photos of red-haired lads in kilts.