I'm hosting Linda Griffin on her blog tour today. BRIDGES is a vintage romance about a May/December love affair. Make sure to enter Linda's giveaway. Thanks for being here, Linda!
Bridges
by Linda Griffin
Genre: Sweet Historical Romance
In
1963, Neil Vincent, a middle-aged World War II veteran and "Christian
atheist," is working at Westfield Court as a chauffeur. He
spends most of his spare time reading.
Mary
Claire DeWinter is a young, blind, Catholic college student and
reluctant heiress. To secure her inheritance, she has to marry within
a year, and her aunt is pressuring her to marry a rich man who teased
and bullied her when she was a child.
Neil
and Mary Claire shouldn't even be friends, but the gulf between them
is bridged by a shared love of books. Can they cross the bridge to
more?
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On the drive to Brierly Station, he didn’t speculate about who Miss DeWinter might be. It wasn’t his job to know who she was, only to meet her train and take her safely back to Westfield Court. She wouldn’t be the last of the friends and relatives who would gather as the old man’s life came to its long-awaited and peaceful end.
When
the train rumbled in, he got out of the car. He stood patiently on the platform
as the passengers disembarked, holding up a small slate on which he had chalked
DEWINTER in large capitals. There weren’t many passengers, but they were
briefly delayed while the conductor helped a blind woman navigate the steps.
Neil’s gaze fell expectantly on a woman in her thirties, with an awful hat, but
she was immediately met by a portly man and a teenage boy. No other likely
prospects appeared, and he waited for someone to respond to the sign. No one
did.
Feeling foolish, he lowered the slate. “Miss DeWinter?” he
asked as he approached her.
“Yes,” she said, turning toward his voice with a smile.
“I’m Vincent,” he said. “The St. James
chauffeur.”
“Pleased to meet you, Mr. Vincent,” she
said. “Thank you for meeting me.” Her voice was soft, her enunciation perfect.
The porter fetched her luggage—a single
gray vinyl suitcase with a flower decal—from the depot and turned it over to
Neil with a cheerful nod. Jane would be disappointed, especially if the girl’s
other clothes were as plain as what she wore, a simple dark dress with long
sleeves and an unfashionable, below-the-knees hemline. “Would you take my arm?”
he asked, positioning himself so she could place her hand in the crook of his elbow,
which she did with easy confidence.
“Do you have a Christian name?” she
asked.
“Yes, miss. It’s Neil.”
“That’s a good name,” she said. “Mine
is Mary Claire. How is my grandfather, do you know?”
Neil, who hadn’t known the old man had
any grandchildren, said, “Hanging on, miss.”
He opened the car door and helped her
into the back seat.
“You don’t have to call me ‘miss’ all
the time,” she said. “Please call me Mary Claire. Or my friends at school call
me Sunny.”
“Yes, miss,” he said automatically and closed the door.
I
was born and raised in San Diego, California and earned a BA in
English from San Diego State University and an MLS from UCLA. I began
my career as a reference and collection development librarian in the
Art and Music Section of the San Diego Public Library and then
transferred to the Literature and Languages Section, where I had the
pleasure of managing the Central Library’s Fiction collection and
initiating fiction order lists for the entire library system.
Although I also enjoy reading biography, memoir, and history, fiction
remains my first love. In addition to the three R’s—reading,
writing, and research—I enjoy Scrabble, movies, and travel.
My
earliest ambition was to be a “book maker” and I wrote my first
story, “Judy and the Fairies,” with a plot stolen from a comic
book, at the age of six. I broke into print in college with a story
in the San Diego State University literary journal, The
Phoenix,
but most of my magazine publications came after I left the library to
spend more time on my writing.
My stories have been
published in numerous journals, including Eclectica,
Thema Literary Journal, The Binnacle, The Nassau Review,
Orbis, and The
Avalon Literary Review, and
in the anthologies Short
Story America, Vol. 2, The
Captive and the Dead, and Australia
Burns. Four
stories, including one as yet unpublished, received honorable
mention in the Short
Story America Prize
for Short Fiction contests. A sweet romance, Bridges (2022),
and four romantic suspense novels, Love,
Death, and the Art of Cooking (2021), Guilty
Knowledge (2020), The
Rebound Effect (2019)
and Seventeen
Days (2018)
are available for order from the Wild Rose Press.
Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!
$10 Amazon
Thanks for hosting, Jana!
ReplyDeleteI do so like the cover. thanks for the great post.
ReplyDeleteThe cover is by Jennifer Greeff! I love it too! Thanks for commenting.
ReplyDelete