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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
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Go Tell the Bees that I am Gone: (Outlander 9)

Go Tell the Bees that I am Gone: (Outlander 9)

byDiana Gabaldon
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Top positive review

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Jane
5.0 out of 5 starsJoy
Reviewed in Australia on 25 November 2021
I have to reread and savour it but thanks Diana, the twists were surprising but I loved it. Now I will have to enjoy all those incredible details that I galloped through to find out what happened. I'm sat in a carpark eating a sandwich because I just had to keep reading after my dentist and couldn't wait the 40 minute drive home😜😍 I'm rather a sad case with no self control whatever when it comes to reading books, just one more page then I'll stop 😳😁🤣
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4 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Sandra S
2.0 out of 5 starsGreat expectations - great disappointment
Reviewed in Australia on 10 December 2021
Like so many readers of the Outlander series, I was anticipating quite the story in Go Tell The Bees That I've Gone. As usual, it's a whopping book, but if you removed all the description of every little thing and every minor character, it would be half the length. Very little substantive plot, just loose ends being tied up and not very imaginatively. Basically, it's a bit like the Gathering in Drums of Autumn - so much endless description of things of no interest and no value to the story. The plot didn't actually get going until Part Five of the book. Up to that point I was disinterested, even in Claire and Jamie! And honestly, the character of William should be integral at this point but the author seems to be playing him as a support character. His supposed romance is flat, flat, flat. There was none of the warmth and passion I've felt in reading other books in the series. Diana's penchant for description hit its heights in this book. One paragraph stated that Claire got out of bed, cleaned her teeth and went downstairs for breakfast - really? Part Five actually got the story moving along somewhere and ended in a way that does make me wonder what it going to happen in Book Ten. I'll buy that if I'm still alive, just to see the final story lines and find out about Jamie's ghost as Diana has promised. My honest opinion is that if this author was previously unknown and she presented this manuscript to a publisher, it would be on the slush pile. The story had very little to do with the title, other than the fact that Claire now keeps bees. Oh dear.
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7 people found this helpful

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From Australia

Sandra S
2.0 out of 5 stars Great expectations - great disappointment
Reviewed in Australia on 10 December 2021
Verified Purchase
Like so many readers of the Outlander series, I was anticipating quite the story in Go Tell The Bees That I've Gone. As usual, it's a whopping book, but if you removed all the description of every little thing and every minor character, it would be half the length. Very little substantive plot, just loose ends being tied up and not very imaginatively. Basically, it's a bit like the Gathering in Drums of Autumn - so much endless description of things of no interest and no value to the story. The plot didn't actually get going until Part Five of the book. Up to that point I was disinterested, even in Claire and Jamie! And honestly, the character of William should be integral at this point but the author seems to be playing him as a support character. His supposed romance is flat, flat, flat. There was none of the warmth and passion I've felt in reading other books in the series. Diana's penchant for description hit its heights in this book. One paragraph stated that Claire got out of bed, cleaned her teeth and went downstairs for breakfast - really? Part Five actually got the story moving along somewhere and ended in a way that does make me wonder what it going to happen in Book Ten. I'll buy that if I'm still alive, just to see the final story lines and find out about Jamie's ghost as Diana has promised. My honest opinion is that if this author was previously unknown and she presented this manuscript to a publisher, it would be on the slush pile. The story had very little to do with the title, other than the fact that Claire now keeps bees. Oh dear.
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Denise B
TOP 50 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars These books are like my best friend and a pair of comfy slippers rolled into one❤️
Reviewed in Australia on 1 December 2021
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I was first introduced to the Outlander books in 2000. So for 21 years I have read and re-read them MANY times devouring the detail of this wonderful series. From the moment you pick up one of the books the story envelopes you and that is exactly how I found myself now that book 9 has been released. If I had to make a comparison between this book and the previous eight I would have to say that the detail was less complex in regard to her plants and medical uses and her surgical procedures. Sadly, we didn’t get as much Jamie and Claire time as there as now so many beloved characters and each of these are also deserving of lots of time, and this book introduced so many new ones. It also left so so many unanswered questions in terms of the multi plots going on throughout this book with differing characters. Previous books also had more danger and more nail biting moments but I think as the characters have aged they are taking more considered risk and doing less stupid things😂😂
I loved that Roger and Brianna have returned to the Ridge bringing a healthy Mandy. I also loved that Brianna finally got to meet her brother William, who could have a whole new series just on him.
All in all this book was wonderful. I read countless books on my Kindle but this series is the ONLY one I buy in hard copy. I have to read them in book form and savour the goodness of the authors work.
Apparently book 10 is the last one and will take years to finish, so I guess I just keep re-reading all 9 again!
I have watched the TV series however the books are much better, and the characters in my head are way better🥰🥰
Thank you Diana Gabaldon for giving me 21 years of reading joy👍👍
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Beryl
4.0 out of 5 stars And so the story keeps going!
Reviewed in Australia on 22 January 2022
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I have just finished Book 9 of the Outlander series. and as usual I feel up in the air and breathless to get to the end of one of these Big Enormous books. So much detailed research, is evident in the complexity of the stories. So many story threads to juggle in your mind. I always feel as if I am back with old friends whose stories I feel privileged to be able to share. The only downside is having to wait before another episode can be created but then I don't want to get to the end so it is always worth the wait.
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Jack from Sydney
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Chapter in the life of the The Frasers
Reviewed in Australia on 4 January 2022
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This is the ninth book in the Outlander series and as always, makes me love the saga even more.
It has love, war and peace described in beautiful prose and detail.
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Mindy
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent As Always
Reviewed in Australia on 18 December 2021
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Another excellent book by Diana Gabaldon. Captivating writing, intricate storyline. Diana has a way with words and she weaves several storylines intricately into book 9 of the Outlander series. Totally drawn into the world she has created.
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Linda Phillips
5.0 out of 5 stars Another thrilling Outlander!
Reviewed in Australia on 23 November 2021
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At last the latest (Nov21) in the Outlander series packed with excitement and a lot more time travel, everything we fans could wish for!
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Chantelle Reid
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic continuation of the adventures of Claire and Jamie Fraser!
Reviewed in Australia on 3 December 2021
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Thoroughly enjoyed this new instalment of the Outlander series. So many emotions it was an absolute roller coaster ride, I loved every minute!
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Rosie
TOP 100 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars The much anticipated 9th volume is here!
Reviewed in Australia on 28 November 2021
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Go Tell The Bees That I Am Gone
The much awaited ninth book in the Outlander Series by Diana Gabaldon, is a magnificent addition to the story. Having waited so long for an update on all of their lives, I found it very emotional at times, sharing their losses and their joys.
What enriches this volume more than previous ones, is the insertions of Hymns, prayers, blessings and incantations, many of which are in the voice of our beloved Jamie Fraser and others by Roger MacKenzie.
It is now the late 1700s and following on from the last book, Roger, Bree and the children have just arrived back in Fraser's Ridge, after a harrowing time in the 1980s.
Jamie is busy building The New House, a place that will welcome, and have room for, not just family, but friends and occasionally, patients.
Bree has brought with her a number of modern books. Among these is The Scottish Rebels of the American Revolution, written by her late father, Frank Randall. The descriptions of raids and fights in the area, comes as a warning and a terrible prophesy for the Frazers.
A regular visitor to The Ridge, is John Quincy Myers, who brings much treasured mail and messages from other parts. What he brings Claire in 1779, is a skep-full of bees and enough lore on their care and upkeep, to encourage Claire to put them in her kitchen garden. The bees are a constant motif throughout this book, and both Jamie and Claire 'go tell the bees' their news and concerns on numerous occasions.
Life has changed for young William Ransom, too. Still angry and confused over the revelations of his origins, he has yet to talk with Jamie or to be any more than coldly polite with Lord John. But those concerns are soon to be eclipsed by other happenings.
Back in North Carolina, Jamie is alarmed by the stories of Loyalist militias causing mayhem around the South. It seems that soon he may need to defend his place and realizes that he will need to find support from like-minded neighbours willing to stand with him.
Weaving factual battles and persons into an always fascinating story of life on the frontier, makes this story all the richer.
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From other countries

M
TOP 500 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars At last...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 December 2021
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I first read Outlander when I was expecting my eldest, so 30 years ago now and back when it was still called Cross Stitch... And here I am STILL reading (and re-reading) the books. I've got the books in paperback, hardback, audio, (even foreign language that I can't even read) and I don't think I'll ever tire of the stories but nothing beats the very first read of a new Diana Gabaldon book in the series. This one was long anticipated and I tried really hard to limit myself to a few chapters a day so that I could make it last longer - Not a chance! I devoured this, just like all the ones before it.

That was my first read but if experience tells me anything it's that that won't be the last time I read it, and while it isn't my favourite I still lapped it up because after all these years I feel like I'm reading about old friends and I'm interested in anything they have to share with me.

I envy anyone coming to this series for the first time and being able to read them all back to back without the years and years in between, but I'm also glad I've had the joy of these for most of my adult life.

The lady can definitely write and I'll happily keep reading her stories for as long as she writes them (I just wish she'd write them quicker, I'm not getting any younger here...
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Ruth
4.0 out of 5 stars Boring ..... hope it gets better (and it does)
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 December 2021
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I’ve loved the Outlander books, ever since buying ‘Cross Stitch’ many years ago, and I was really looking forward to reading the latest - after all, it has been a very, very long wait. It’s just so boring though; page after page of descriptions of really uninteresting things .... but nothing actually happening (apart from the bear incident!). Somebody on another review said the pace picks up a bit at chapter 120; oh goodness, I’m only on chapter 35 and I’m losing the will to live!

Far too much time up to now has been spent on Lord John/William. It’s taking me forever to read, partly because I find myself nodding off, or going off to do something more interesting (like the ironing 😂)- but I also spend a lot of time looking up words I’ve never heard of (Kindle Translate doesn’t have an option for gaelic - perhaps we could do with a glossary at the end?) and, with a 7yr(?) gap between books, I just can’t remember who everybody is. So perhaps a Dramatis Personae at the front would be a better idea than a family tree containing people who aren’t even mentioned.

If the first book had been this bad I’d have cut my losses then, but I’ll persevere with this book (although I’ve now adopted the skim reading approach) and probably get the next one so I can find out how it all ends; I expect it’ll be another 7yrs and I’ll have forgotten the shortcomings of this book.

Okay ...... a month or so later and I've finished the book - and I'm pleased to say it did get better!

For me it's a book of two halves - well actually, a quarter and three-quarters! The first quarter was very slow and quite boring; nothing much happened, and I seriously considered giving up.

Then the pace picked up and I started to enjoy it. By the time I got near the end I was reading quite slowly - torn between wanting to see how it finished, but not wanting to finish it. Yes, a lot of time was spent with William/Lord John/Amaranthus (who I wasn't particularly keen on to begin with, but by the end she was growing on me) and Ian and his family - but I quite enjoyed their stories. I felt Fergus & his family suddenly got dropped from the story; one minute they were leaving Charles Town with Roger & Bree ...... then no mention of them again, until quite near the end we are told they are in Wilmington. It's almost as though the author had completely forgotten about them.

I know DG is working on a prequel book now, so I expect we're going to have a gap of many years before the promised 10th book in the series materialises. I do hope not????
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