Blog tour: Eddie Winston Is Looking For Love

Welcome to the blog tour for Eddie Winston Is Looking For Love by Marianne Cronin!

More about the book…

Eddie Winston is ninety years old. He has lived and he has loved, but he has never been kissed.

A true gentleman and incurable romantic, Eddie spends his days volunteering at a charity shop, where he sorts through the donations of the living and the dead, preserving letters and tokens of love along the way. It is here that he meets Bella, a troubled young woman who, aged twenty-four, has just lost the love of her life.

When Bella learns that Eddie is yet to have his first kiss, she resolves to help him finally find love, sparking an adventure that will take them to unexpected places and, they hope, bring Eddie to the moment he has waited for all his life.

As Bella helps Eddie and Eddie helps, well, everyone, a soul-stirring story of friendship and kindness unfolds as we see how those we love are never forgotten and it is never too late to try again.

More about the author…

Marianne Cronin was born in 1990 and grew up in Warwickshire.

After gaining her PhD in applied linguistics, she worked in academia until becoming a writer.

Her first novel, The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot, published by Doubleday in 2021, was voted 'most uplifting book of 2021' by The Independent and shortlisted for a Goodreads Choice Award for Fiction.

She lives in the Midlands with her family and her cat.

My impressions…

Are you ready to fall in love with two incredible characters and a friendship that has a touch of magical about it? Eddie and Bella are at different stages of their lives and yet they both need something that only the other person is able to provide.

I knew when I read the synopsis that I would end up loving this book, so no surprises there! It was a rollercoaster of laughter, hope, tears, sadness and repeat. When well written, intergenerational friendships are truly special, and this is no exception.

Plus, as someone who likes a good browse in charity shops (and who has regretted giving things away in the past), I adored the idea of a shelf where personal and unsellable items are kept for people who might change their mind!

Three words to describe it. Funny. Heart-warming. Hopeful.

Do I like the cover? Yes, I like its simplicity.

Have I read any other books by the same author? No, but I’d like to catch up.

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