Are There YA Books Like Outlander Series With Romantic Adventure?

2025-12-30 00:56:49 223

2 Answers

Quentin
Quentin
2026-01-03 10:14:57
Gotta admit, when I first wanted something like 'Outlander' in YA form I was worried I’d have to choose between romance or adventure — thankfully there are books that give both. Quick hits: 'The Girl from Everywhere' is dreamy and nautical with time-hopping maps and a slow-burn romance; 'Ruby Red' is witty, with time travel rules and a flirty hero; 'A Thousand Pieces of You' is all about alternate worlds and chasing someone you love through them; 'Passenger' throws you into dangerous historical moments with a lot of chemistry; and 'The Love That Split the World' is emotional and weirdly haunting in the best way.

If you’re after gritty historical detail and grown-up heat, peek at older crossover titles too, but as YA picks these five cover the romantic-adventure beats beautifully. I ended up rereading a couple of them on rainy days because they felt like cozy, perilous escapes — perfect for curling up with a cup of something warm.
Wyatt
Wyatt
2026-01-03 17:16:01
Craving that heady mix of historical sweep, stubborn heroes, and a romance that makes your cheeks flush? I get it — 'Outlander' scratches a very specific itch — and there are YA books that hit similar notes, even if they each bring their own flavor.

If you like time travel with emotional stakes and clever plotting, start with 'A Thousand Pieces of You' by Claudia Gray. It’s less about living long in a historical era and more about leaping between alternate realities, chasing a truth and a love that feel urgent and cinematic. For a ship-bound, history-hopping vibe that leans more toward the adventurous and atmospheric side of 'Outlander', 'The Girl from Everywhere' by Heidi Heilig is brilliant: a multicultural, sea-faring romp where maps and time both bend, and the protagonist wrestles with family, loyalty, and romance against exotic backdrops. If you want smarter, wink-filled time-travel romance with a contemporary teen voice, check out 'Ruby Red' by Kerstin Gier — it’s funny, romantic, and very much about the chaos that time travel causes in a young life.

Not every YA title will replicate the sexiness and mature historical detail of Diana Gabaldon, so if you’re looking for emotional intensity and a time-laced love story without graphic adult content, 'The Love That Split the World' by Emily Henry is a moving choice: it blends time slips with family history and a tragic-romantic pull. For action-first readers who still want sparks, 'Passenger' by Alexandra Bracken mixes historical set-pieces, time-jumping, and a tense romance that grows through danger. And if your appetite leans toward historical adventure without the time travel but with atmospheric, Scottish-flavored stakes and fae-adjacent danger, try 'The Falconer' by Elizabeth May — it scratches a lot of the same itch.

All of these vary in maturity level, pacing, and how much history versus fantasy they emphasize, so you can pick what aspect of 'Outlander' matters most to you: the travel, the romance, or the sense of being ripped from one life into another. Personally, I loved how each of these reimagines the romantic-adventure combo for younger shoulders — they surprised me and gave me a new favorite for different moods.
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