Clavering Chronicles Books in Order
Part ofJennie Goutet Books in OrderThis page shows the Clavering Chronicles by Jennie Goutet in order, with short summaries, series background, and help choosing where to begin.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
A Fall from Grace
by Jennie Goutet
2022
After her family's ruin, Selena Lockhart expects little kindness from society or from her new neighbor, Sir Lucius Clavering. But when she needs help, his prejudice gives way to protectiveness, and both must rethink what honor and love require.
Philippa Holds Court
by Jennie Goutet
2022
Philippa Clavering is sure she can save her friend from the wrong suitor, until the friend's gruff brother starts blocking every move. Their battle of wills turns into a sharper, sweeter kind of courtship than either planned.
The Sport of Matchmaking
by Jennie Goutet
2022
George Clavering treats matchmaking like a game, until a spirited lady makes the stakes feel uncomfortably real. What begins in teasing rivalry slowly becomes a test of whether either one is ready to stop playing and mean it.
Series background & context
The Clavering Chronicles is built around three siblings, Lucius, Philippa, and George Clavering, and it follows them through the marriage market with plenty of family interference along the way. These are Regency romances, but they are less about glitter for its own sake and more about what duty, reputation, and affection look like when a close-knit family is trying to do its best. The setting shifts from a country house in winter to the London Season in spring, which gives the series a nice sense of movement.
The first book, A Fall from Grace, opens with Selena Lockhart after her family's ruin. She has lost standing, security, and the future she once expected, and her new neighbor Sir Lucius Clavering is not eager to welcome another complication into his already crowded life. That mismatch gives the book its shape. Lucius has money, obligations, and a habit of judging too quickly. Selena has pride, very little protection, and good reason not to trust easy kindness.
Then the focus turns to Lucius's sister in Philippa Holds Court. Philippa is bright, energetic, and far too ready to improve other people's romantic prospects. That would be charming enough on its own, but the book gets sharper once she crosses swords with Jack Blythefield, a man who sees her meddling much too clearly. Their story brings the series more squarely into London, with conversation, social maneuvering, and politics hovering just offstage.
The third book, The Sport of Matchmaking, belongs to George Clavering. He begins as the younger brother with time to spare and a taste for amusement, but his book gives him more weight than that. The mood is still lively, yet there is a real shift as he is pushed from flirting with the idea of love into taking another person seriously. That is a good example of what the series does well. The characters are allowed to grow up a little without losing the wit that makes them appealing.
Across all three books, the Claverings feel like a real family rather than a tidy set of names arranged for later sequels. They annoy one another, defend one another, and keep turning up in one another's business. That warmth matters. It makes even the sharper social scenes feel lived in, and it keeps the stakes personal.
If you are wondering what to expect, think polished but approachable Regency romance. There is banter, embarrassment, misunderstanding, slow-burn feeling, and a steady interest in how people behave when society is watching. The books are connected enough to reward reading in order, but each romance has its own center and its own happy ending.
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