Whether you’re reading the Outlander series for the first time or re-reading with the new TV show, we invite you to play along with us as we journey through the books’ best tropes and cliches. Grab a book (any of them, though especially the first three) and a drink — perhaps some whiskey the color of Claire’s eyes or just some restorative willowbark tea — and play along. There will be a bonus round for viewers of the Starz show.
Take a drink every time…
- Claire gets a new dress because the one she’s wearing is ruined. Bonus drink if it’s borrowed and her breasts BARELY fit into it.
- Claire insists she really did love Frank even though, yeah, OK.
- Frank acts like a monster.
- Author finds a nice vocabulary word and repeats it conspicuously within 50 pages.
- Nipples.
- Multi-page internal monologue.
- Claire and Jamie separated seemingly forever.
- Minor character reappears improbably as major player.
- Claire practices indefensibly modern medicine.
- Claire practices herbology.
- Man drinks breast milk as foreplay. (Double drink because: nipples.)
- Color of Claire’s eyes is compared to any alcoholic beverage.
- Claire’s curly hair is mentioned.
- A murder mystery!
- Vague improbable descriptions — variations on “a cold shiver ran up her spine and it wasn’t because of the cold” or “she might have seen a glimmer of a smile/frown/etc. on his lips/eye but it might have been the light.”
- Claire and Jamie FEEL each other walk into the room.
- Prose is pretty at first but makes no sense on a second reading.
- Violence that is WORSE than Game of Thrones happens to characters you are supposed to love. But they survive! And then you have to read about them surviving.
- Description of Jamie’s skull, its hardness and shape.
- Romanticization of white men. (Stick to sips for this one lest you die of alcohol poisoning.)
- Mention of the different shades of red in Jamie’s/Brianna’s hair.
- A “shadow” falls across someone’s face.
- Anytime Claire gets worried someone’s cut will get infected.
- Baby born to Murray family.
- Human pregnancy referred to in animal terms, i.e. “breeding,” “sire,” “foal.”
- Author gestures toward grand theory of time travel are best left unscrutinized.
- Claire picks something out of Jamie’s hair.
- Jamie’s two fingers flutter against his leg.
- Two characters look almost exactly alike.
- A ball of ice in the pit of Claire’s stomach is warmed by whiskey or brandy.
- A sex scene gets super abstract and DOESN’T MAKE SENSE. But is still hot.
- A sex scene that makes you ask, “Wait, is this rape?” But the author is like, “Don’t worry about it.”
- Cameo by historical figure.
- Jamie stands straight as an arrow with his shining hair a head above all the other man he is standing near.
- Hint that Scots freeball under their kilts.
- A couple, usually Jamie and Claire, has an entire conversation in one look without speaking.
- “It had been a long time since breakfast.”
- “More than was strictly necessary.”
- Claire finding Jaime easily in a crowd because of his height and red hair.
- Jamie is unable to wink, blinks idiotically.
BONUS ROUND!
- Graphic violence/gore beyond book descriptions because that’s how prestige dramas do.
- You miss something important Frank said about local history because SO BORING.
- Evidence that Tobias Menzies (Frank) agreed to less nudity than Caitriona Balfe (Claire)
- Band of Scottish kinsmen reminiscent of hobbits.
- Romantic lead clearly identifiable as the clean one.
- Casting of Graham McTavish as Dougal makes you wish Claire would get a little action on the side with him.
- Fill-in in Gaelic dialogue that could mean absolutely nothing. H/T to the Gaelic tutor:
- You would be unsurprised to learn Sam Heughan (Jamie) had a starring role in 2011’s A Princess for Christmas.
- Dramatic irony over long-resolved historical events.
- Claire visits site in 18th century and flashback (flash forward?) shows her visiting in 20th Century with Frank.
- Horsemanship! Swordplay!
- Claire makes 20th century wisecrack that no one else gets.
- Claire has no choice but to become emotionally and physically close to Jamie. She’s just tryina survive, guys.
- ADDED FRANK SCENE! Please try to conjure some sympathy.
- Timeline shuffled to get to the sex sooner.
Rose Cole and Anna Halverson contributed to this piece.
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