‘Outlander’ series finale and post-credits scene explained

After nearly 12 years, eight seasons, and 101 episodes, the mystical, magical love story of Claire and Jamie Fraser has come to an end.
Or has it?
Yes. But it’s understandable that the way things wrapped up in the Season 8 finale could live you scratching your floppy-wool-capped head.
The series finale of Outlander was very much an episode of Outlander, complete with sweet conversations, passionate love scenes with questionable amounts of privacy (Just how thick were those tent walls?), and an epic battle with a tragic outcome.
This explainer will get into detail about the very last moments of the Outlander series finale, so if you haven’t ventured through the stones of Craigh na Dun one final time, click away now.
The Flashback
The action of the finale all leads to the climactic Battle of Kings Mountain, during which Claire’s first husband, Frank Randall, had written in his history of the American Revolution that Jamie Fraser was destined to die. Well, that battle finally comes, with Jamie working to accept his fate, but in a surprise twist, he stands victorious (and very much alive) once the fighting has concluded. “Frank was wrong!” Claire cries joyously, sticking one final knife into poor Frank before the end of the series.
But, of course, the British commander was able to hide a very large pistol on his person after being taken captive and shoots Jamie dead. Claire races back to be at her husband’s side as he dies and then refuses to leave him until seemingly expiring herself.
The show then circles back to a moment from the very first episode of Outlander, when Frank spotted a traditionally dress Highlander standing outside his Inverness lodgings and spying on Claire through a window. In the pilot, that figure (who very much resembles Jamie) disappears before Frank can question him. What the finale shows us is Jamie seemingly after that encounter, looking meaningfully at the stones of Craigh na Dun, and departing just as blue flowers blossom at their base.
The order of events is left somewhat vague. It’s not explicitly stated what Jamie sensed when standing at the stones, whether the scene was meant to be a literal depiction of what happened before Claire’s arrival in Jamie’s time, or if the sequence look place on some other plane of existence.
Speaking of which…
The Final Scene
After a series-covering montage of Claire and Jamie’s love, the episode returns to the pair lying on the battlefield, looking pretty dead — that is, until they both take big, deep breaths!
Are they alive? Have Claire’s powers of healing managed to defy death? Are they simply awaking in a shared afterlife together? Exact interpretations of the moment may vary, but in one way or another, Claire and Jamie end the series as they were supposed to: together.
The Post-Credits Scene
All right. This was wild!
Viewers who stuck around through the credits of the finale were treated to a winky coda for the series. In an American bookstore (We know it’s America because of the flags), a reader gets her copy of Outlander signed by none other than Scottsdale-based author Diana Gabaldon. The keen-eyed reader has noticed that Gabaldon carries with her a journal, one that strikingly resembles something into which Claire had recorded her and Jamie’s story. Gabaldon comments that the book is a “wee bit of inspiration,” implying that this entire saga was plagiarized!
Not really. It’s a joke, but a bonkers one at that.



