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CLEAN READ SUGGESTIONS
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Amber G., Group Creator
(last edited Apr 28, 2014 10:36AM)
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Apr 28, 2014 10:33AM

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Would everyone be willing to post at least one book to this list (not one we've read as a group) to help make this suggestion list really great?!

Nine Coaches Waiting, Madam, Will You Talk?: Old-fashioned romantic suspense.
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society: WWII and after on the small island of Guernsey.
YA fantasy: The Hollow Kingdom, The Thief, Summers at Castle Auburn, Crown Duel.
Science Fiction: Ender's Game, Doomsday Book.
Content notes: All are clean. Doomsday Book deals with the Plague, which may be disturbing. There is some violence in The Hollow Kingdom, but I don't think it's over the top.

Also, if they haven't been added already..."The Walk" series by Richard Paul Evans. The last book was just released for those who don't like to read series until all the books are out. Very clean, and full of life lessons.
Dan Brown books aren't squeaky clean, but I enjoy them and find them them clean enough to add to this list. They are PG-13 in my mind.


Kami, you are already an approved member or you wouldn't be able to post on a thread or read our discussions. Welcome!

I've been reading the Charles Lenox mystery series written by Charles Finch and have really enjoyed them. They are set in the late 1800s in London. Super clean.


I love WWII era...thanks for the recommendation! I enjoyed Alan Bradley as well. I enjoyed most of Maisie Dobbs too, if you haven't read those.

One suggestion is that you should be a little careful about accepting "friend" invitations from people who you haven't had any real interaction with on GR. If I get a friend invite from someone whose name I don't recognize from group or review discussions, I go check out their profile to make sure they look like a legitimate person to get to know.
Have fun! I've really enjoyed getting to know lots of people on ÀÏ»¢»úÎÈÓ®·½·¨. Right now I'm doing a buddy read of the Count of Monte Cristo (unabridged version!) with two extremely nice, intelligent ladies that I know only through ÀÏ»¢»úÎÈÓ®·½·¨.



Thanks, Sara! This looks great!





Stephanie Black has really great mysteries and I've enjoyed Josi Kilpack's culinary mystery series starting with Lemon Tart.
I write clean suspense/thrillers and my Hostage Negotiation team series is out now. All Fall Down (by Julie Coulter Bellon) won the RONE award for Best Suspense/Thriller.

Sarah Eden and Carla Kelly both write very good Regencies and historic romances. Sarah's can get a little heavy on the angst and misery (especially in Glimmer of Hope :p) but I liked Seeking Persephone and Courting Miss Lancaster. Carla Kelly occasionally gets a little too spicy if you're a straight-up clean reads only person. Her LDS ones are safe but if you read the ones published by Harlequin you're taking your chances. I can recommend Mrs. Drew Plays Her Hand, Libby's London Merchant (both Regencies), Borrowed Light and My Loving Vigil Keeping (both LDS).

I second the Sarah Eden suggestion for regencies. I've also liked Blackmoore and Edenbrooke by Julianne Donaldson. Jennifer Lunt Moore just put out her debut novel Becoming Lady Lockwood that was quite well done.




Strength to Endure, by Tristi Pinkston (my favorite book read from last year)
Surviving Hitler: The Unlikely True Story of an SS Soldier and a Jewish Woman, by O. Hakan Palm (WW II with LDS intersection that works because it's real)
All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr (WW II)
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, by Ransom Riggs ( a good chance to explore differences)
The Total Money Makeover: A Proven Plan for Financial Fitness, by Dave Ramsey (because women can make or break family finances)
Abigail Adams: Witness to a Revolution, by Natalie S. Bober (Personal opinion: She would have made a great RS leader and demonstrates her steady progress and development of ideas that made her who she was and as a great support to her husband's betterment)

Nine Coaches Waiting, [book:Madam, Will ..."
I'm not sure I would say Ender's Game is clean, I was rather horrified by the language and the crudity in the book. I wouldn't say not to read it but to claim it is a clean read doesn't fit in my book.


One I read last summer for the first time, and loved, is Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South. Written in Victorian times, it's kind of like an Industrial Age Pride and Prejudice. I highly recommend it.
A cute and charming book is Daddy-Long-Legs. Both of these books are old enough to be out of copyright, so you can get them as ebooks free on Gutenberg and other places.


Just finished When Crickets Cry by Charles Martin and its a great feel good story that is not only clean but promotes chastity, quoted from the bible and actually had unique insights on heaven/hell. All of that while not really feeling like you were reading a "Christian" novel... Just a good fiction novel.



If you liked "When Crickets Cry"
you would probably enjoy Martin's other book "Wrapped in Rain."
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