What the Steadfast Reader Said About Clean Reading

ByGD

What the Steadfast Reader Said About Clean Reading

Last month I tried “reblogging” for the first time. Although the whole point of having a blog is to share your own thoughts, sometimes you run across something that you just want to share. Mostly, I use Twitter for that, but lately I’ve seen a few blog posts that really seemed to fit my blog more than my Twitter, and that didn’t really need much commentary from me.

The Problem

This blogger isn’t on WordPress, {2018 update: or anywhere else on the web anymore} so I can’t link to it. It’s the first I’ve heard of “clean reading” and I think she did a pretty good job of explaining and debunking the practice. I especially appreciate this statement

I do think that every now and then we should make an effort step outside our own echo chambers and explore things that make us a little uncomfortable or that we find a little bit ugly. Those are the places where we will learn the most, where we will grow the most. 

I’m a big fan of the blog No Clean Singing. After this, I’m tempted to rename my blog No Clean Reading. Would you read it?

About the author

GD administrator

I'm a freelance content and grant writer in Seattle specializing in parenting, arts and the environment.

7 Comments so far

I.S. LanderPosted on10:22 am - May 21, 2014

I would read anything you right, regardless of the blog’s name. But for some reason I do find the new candidate appealing.

    GDPosted on5:08 pm - May 25, 2014

    Are web rings still a thing? We could start an Unclean Ring: NCS, NCR, maybe Phro could rebrand as No Clean Writing…we’d definitely want to get a photographer on board.

April @ The Steadfast ReaderPosted on7:46 am - May 23, 2014

I would read that blog. Obviously. 🙂 Thanks for the shout-out.

Book Report: 101 Reykjavík | gemma D. alexanderPosted on7:54 am - Jun 25, 2014

[…] us, but he makes their stories significant when less capable hands would merely make them sordid. Clean readers […]

Book Report: 101 Reykjavík – gemma D. alexanderPosted on12:42 pm - Jul 5, 2018

[…] us, but he makes their stories significant when less capable hands would merely make them sordid. Clean readers […]

Filtering the Flood of Music I Like | gemma D. alexanderPosted on12:44 pm - Nov 11, 2019

[…] don’t go out of my way to screen bands by lyrical content. I’m not like a musical clean reader. Sometimes I like a band’s music without any backstory, and later find out that they suck […]

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