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  • An Echo in the Bone: Outlander, Book 7
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Opiniones de clientes

4,7 de 5 estrellas
4,7 de 5
32.888 valoraciones globales
5 estrellas
80%
4 estrellas
14%
3 estrellas
4%
2 estrellas
1%
1 estrella
1%
An Echo in the Bone: Outlander, Book 7

An Echo in the Bone: Outlander, Book 7

porDiana Gabaldon
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MaríaD
5,0 de 5 estrellasUna edición bonita
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 23 de junio de 2022
La edición es preciosa. Con el uso y el tiempo se van despegando las esquinas de la portada y me dan ganas de forrar el libro para que no se estropee más, pero echaría a perder el brillo y el relieve de la cubierta. Es lo que tienen las tapas blandas. El libro en sí... ¿Qué decir de él? Sale James Fraser. ¿Qué más quieres?
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Principal comentario crítico

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Cliente Amazon
3,0 de 5 estrellasok but she's written better
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 8 de junio de 2020
alright but got a little boaring at times
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30.699 valoraciones totales, 4.780 con reseñas

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MaríaD
5,0 de 5 estrellas Una edición bonita
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 23 de junio de 2022
Compra verificada
La edición es preciosa. Con el uso y el tiempo se van despegando las esquinas de la portada y me dan ganas de forrar el libro para que no se estropee más, pero echaría a perder el brillo y el relieve de la cubierta. Es lo que tienen las tapas blandas. El libro en sí... ¿Qué decir de él? Sale James Fraser. ¿Qué más quieres?
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Becca
5,0 de 5 estrellas Great!
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 22 de junio de 2022
Compra verificada
Muy pocket. Letra bastante pequeña.
Pero tal cual sale en las fotos.
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PPM
5,0 de 5 estrellas Encuadernación espectacular
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 28 de octubre de 2018
Compra verificada
Creo que es el último o penúltimo de la saga Outlander, éste es el único que tengo con tapa dura y es espectacular.
Son más de 1.000 páginas por libro, por tanto, llevará unas cuantas horas leerlo en inglés.
Paciencia
Imagen del cliente
PPM
5,0 de 5 estrellas Encuadernación espectacular
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 28 de octubre de 2018
Creo que es el último o penúltimo de la saga Outlander, éste es el único que tengo con tapa dura y es espectacular.
Son más de 1.000 páginas por libro, por tanto, llevará unas cuantas horas leerlo en inglés.
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Cliente Amazon
5,0 de 5 estrellas Muy buena novela como el resto de la serie.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 28 de mayo de 2018
Compra verificada
Me parece que la autora sigue las aventuras de los personajes de forma extraordinaria. La ubicación histórica es notable y la hace aún más interesante. Engancha y no puedes dejar de leerla hasta el final.
No se puede evitar querer a los personajes.
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José A. B.
5,0 de 5 estrellas Le encantó a la persona que se lo regalé
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 19 de julio de 2019
Compra verificada
Un regalo de libro
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Angelica S.
5,0 de 5 estrellas Serie histórica y romántica
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 20 de febrero de 2019
Compra verificada
Me ha gustado mucho
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De otros países

D. Mikels
4,0 de 5 estrellas "You have nay soul!"
Revisado en los Estados Unidos 🇺🇸 el 5 de diciembre de 2022
Compra verificada
**SPOILER ALERTS ABOUND!**
My overall observation of AN ECHO IN THE BONE, the 7th installment of Diana Gabaldon's outstanding Outlander series: There is a virtual whirlwind of sub-plots hitting the reader as the 1200-page volume comes to its conclusion. . .several of them not fully vetted. Example: Claire, as she walks the streets of Philadelphia and views the scores of young men being interrogated by British sentries, muses to herself how easy it would be for she, a middle-aged woman, to move revolutionary materials without suspicion; only a handful of pages later, a peer of Lord John Grey advises that Claire is about to be arrested for sedition for handing out forbidden pamphlets. There is absolutely no vetting in the interim.

No doubt all of these story lines will get resolved in the next installment, yet the frustration did not take away from this reviewer's overall enjoyment of the novel. In breaking down this monumental story, I find it falls more or less into four character groups:

A. CLAIRE AND JAMIE. The book begins as Claire and Jamie leave the charred remnants of the "Big House" on Fraser's Ridge to return to Scotland, where Jamie intends to retrieve his printing press in Edinburgh and bring it back to the Colonies for the Revolutionary War effort. Their voyage, however, is interrupted by British treachery and intrigue, thrusting them directly into the Revolution in upstate New York, where they face Ticonderoga and Saratoga. They do, along with Young Ian, return to Scotland, with a bittersweet reunion at Lallybroch; there is still a deep bitterness Jenny holds for Claire, to the latter's constant frustration. Towards the end of their stay, Claire is called away via a letter from Marsali; young Henri-Christian has such difficulty breathing that he must be watched as he sleeps every night--Marsali begs her stepmother to please come to Philadelphia to remove the boy's tonsils. Claire and Jamie are separated, and Jamie's return trip to the Colonies spawns an eye-opening sequence of misunderstandings.

B. YOUNG IAN AND WILLIAM. It's only fitting that a major portion of this book focuses on the next generation: Ian Murray, still reeling from his tragic Mohawk past, and William Grey, the ninth Duke of Ellesmere and Jamie's illegitimate son (although Willie does not know this. . .yet). Ian comes to Willie's aid in Virginia, when Willie is gravely injured working in British intelligence. While Ian knows fully well who Willie's father is, he keeps the knowledge to himself, while both young men compete for the affections of Rachel Hunter, a young Quaker woman assisting her surgeon brother Denzel. The reader is immersed in Willie's wartime adventures; the young lieutenant experiences battle in New York City, and he's literally on the other side of Jamie and Claire at Saratoga. His "revelation" at the end of the book is mesmerizing page turning; as Jenny glibly quips: "Like father, like son."

C. LORD JOHN GREY. From London to the Carolinas to Philadelphia, Lord John moves in and out of the story as he communicates with his adopted son Willie, aids and assists his nephew Henry, who is gravely injured in battle, and looks after his niece Dorothea, whom he's brought with him to the Colonies from London. Lord John also has a counterpart working in French intelligence whom he encounters after many years; this personage is looking for, of all people, Fergus Fraser; the official suggests that Fergus just might have a wealthy benefactor. (Comte. St. Germain, anyone?) And, as the story rushes toward its breathless ending, Lord John does the only honorable thing he can when he learns Claire is going to be arrested for sedition: He marries her.

D. BRIANNA AND ROGER. 1980. The charm of Outlander is time travel, with groups of major characters living simultaneously in different times. Here, Bree and Roger, along with children Jem and Mandy (who has had surgery to correct her heart murmur) renovate and restore Lallybroch in 1980. Roger pursues his career in ministry, while Bree, an engineer, gets a job supervising work at a hydroelectric dam. Bree faces the "good old boy" structure of a male-dominated profession, and she does so with limitless resolve. (After all, she's Jamie Fraser's daughter). Yet throughout this story thread, Jem and Mandy continue to complain about a "boogey man" living in the kirk behind the house--a stranger who eludes Roger's search for him. Ultimately the two find each other, leading to a discomforting discovery: the "stranger" is Roger's seven-times great-grandfather William Buccleigh MacKenzie, who has accidently fallen through the stones to land in modern times. While preparing to send Buccleigh back through the stones at Craig Na Dun, Jem disappears. Has he been abducted, and if so, has the captor taken the boy back through the stones? All these question marks remain unresolved as AN ECHO IN THE BONE concludes.

Obviously, with this installment, there is a lot to chew on. There are a plethora of other characters--some of them historical (e.g., Benjamin Franklin, Benedict Arnold, et al)--weaving in and out of this lengthy volume; this is easily, to this reviewer, the most complex installment in the series. As AN ECHO IN THE BONE concludes, it brings up one incontrovertible fact: The next volume has its work cut out for it.
~D. Mikels, Esq.
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Libro El Nombre del Viento
5,0 de 5 estrellas Libro que me hacía falta
Revisado en México 🇲🇽 el 25 de abril de 2023
Compra verificada
Llego en buenas condiciones, ya completé mi colección, gracias.
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Alpha Reader
5,0 de 5 estrellas Thoroughly satisfying
Revisado en los Estados Unidos 🇺🇸 el 5 de octubre de 2009
Compra verificada
`Echo' is told from several POV's - Jamie and Claire's, as has been the tradition since `Outlander'. Brianna and Roger have narrated since their appearance in `Voyager', and in `Echo' they tell their story from the year 1980 where they reside in Lallybroch. John Grey also lends his voice, offering a very different perspective from the British intelligence side of the war - more a battle of wits, connections and subterfuge than sword and musket.

New narration is lent by young Ian - whose story until `Echo' has been shrouded in mystery, only briefly revealed in an exchange with Brianna from `A death of snow and ashes' when he lamented his time with the Indian tribe and his ex-wife, Emily.

Also new to the stories narration is William, Lord Ellesmere. William is Jamie's illegitimate son, whose mother was Geneva Dunsany. Jamie was a stable hand on William's estate when William was just a boy, and the two encountered one another on Fraser's Ridge when William was a lad years later. But otherwise, William has no recollection of Jamie and thinks John Grey is his only father.

These various narrations may seem confusing, but actually they lend a new layer to the story. Jamie has always been a leader - in his lifetime he has been laird to the Lallybroch residents, lead men in battle, remained strong for those men during imprisonment and exile and created a community on the Ridge. The various narrations of those people Jamie and Claire have gathered around them and made family, make for a humbling testimony to the rich lives they have lead (separately, and together). The narrations also lend credence to one of the themes echoed throughout the `Outlander' books - that nothing is ever truly lost to time, history lives on - the very echo in the bone for Jamie and Claire lie in William and Brianna, and their grandchildren, Jem and Amanda and also in their foster child, Fergus, and his family.

Keeping with the theme of time and that nothing is every truly lost, there are many passages in which Jamie and Claire reminisce about old friends and enemies. Claire dwells on thoughts of the disturbed woman, Malva Christie. Jamie and Claire are warmed by memories of the Chinaman, Mr. Wilhouby, and pray he lives on. Jamie remembers characters from the Highlands - Rupert, Dougal and Callum. And many times throughout Jamie and Claire think back on their relationship - their first kiss and wedding day. All these recollections are a beautiful nod to the general theme of echo - while also acting as a very decisive severing. There is a sense that Gabaldon is tying up a few loose ends, gently closing one chapter in Jamie and Claire's lives, in preparation for what is to come - namely, the war and revolution it begins. Readers will quickly deduce that `Echo' is not the book in which Gabaldon deals with the crux of the American war, rather `Echo' is the intermediary - the book before Gabaldon takes a great leap and starts dealing with truly major historical events.

Gabaldon's masterful writing lends credence to this sense that something is just around the corner. The war, for certain, but this sense of foreshadowing and preparation for something big comes in the separate narrations as well.

William's narration has a permeating sense of foreboding. Jamie reminds Claire early on that he promised himself and Lord John Grey that he would not meet his son at the end of a rifle on opposite sides of a war. But as we read William's story, told from the perspective of a patriotic English soldier, there is a weightiness to his words and an impending sense of doom that when he and Jamie meet, it will end disastrously.

Roger and Brianna's story (told from 1980) also has a terrible sense of dread surrounding the telling. Having bought Lallybroch and restored it to modern living; Roger and Brianna are trying to cope with life after time travel. But amidst the domestic duties, new jobs and Roger's crisis of faith, Mandy and Jem are telling disturbing stories of seeing a mythical Nuckelavee man outside their windows and in the mountains surrounding Lallybroch.

`Echo' is a slow burn - the action doesn't really pick up until Jamie, Claire and Ian arrive in Scotland (Part six - around page 620), but after that it's a mad dash to the finish, guaranteed to keep any reader glued to their seat to read how it all winds up.

`Echo' is brilliant, and fans of the `Outlander' series will not be disappointed (only frustrated by the ending, no doubt). It's not the best installment in the 'Outlander' series, but deeply satisfying nonetheless. Gabaldon beautifully intertwines fact and fiction when she writes about the events leading to war. And as always, Gabaldon excels in her clinical descriptions - Lizzie's child-birthing scene is meticulous and compelling for its gory realism. But best of all, Gabaldon remains true to the love story at the centre of the series - and blesses fans with plenty of Jamie & Claire goodness.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading `Echo', and devoured the 800+ book in two days. Alas, now comes the long wait for the next Outlander book. There is often a 5-4 year gap between books; on the one hand it guarantees a tale of the utmost quality from Ms. Gabaldon, but on the other it means a long-suffering wait for the next Jamie & Claire instalment. And `Echo's' cliff-hanger ending means the wait for book # 8 will be an excruciatingly long one indeed....
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Lo Lo
5,0 de 5 estrellas Good book
Revisado en los Estados Unidos 🇺🇸 el 12 de mayo de 2023
Compra verificada
I didn't like what 2 of the characters had to do towers a the end .I liked all.the parts about the revolution.
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