Mina Anne was troubled. She had loved Paul ever since the accident that had brought him to Cutler Hospital. But—one thought turned her days into torment. How could she love a man and still despise his outlook on life? How could she marry a man who so violently disapproved of the job she was doing?
GRADE: C-
BEST QUOTES:
“Put two girls
and a can opener in the kitchen, and you have a feast.”
“For a
physician, you are really very uninformed in a certain field of diagnosis.”
REVIEW:
Mina Anne
Richards is, in addition to one of the more awkwardly named VNRN heroines I’ve
met, a public health nurse. She’s concerned about a population of migrant
workers who are living without basic plumbing or running water, and now they’re
about to be evicted from their squatting grounds, apparently because “the camp
was a veritable breeding ground for communicable diseases.” You could say the
same about hospitals and elementary schools, but whatever.
Mina Anne’s
boyfriend, attorney C. Paul Parker, is pressing her to give up her job and marry
him, but she’s not completely convinced. Paul is particularly earnest in his
proposal because the president of a large company will give Paul’s firm his
business but only if Paul marries Mr. Chalder’s daughter—a very peculiar arrangement
in a number of ways—and Paul will be off the hook if he’s already married, he
explains to Mina Anne. When she objects, he responds, “Once we’re married, I’ll
be able to show you where your perspective is out of focus.” Curiously, Mina
Anne neither flings a skillet at his head nor shoves him out the door, but
continues to consider, no matter how tepidly, his proposal.
The book gives
us a lot of back-and-forth between Mina Anne and Paul, and even some mildly
interesting if dated debates about welfare—one poor family with only one pair
of shoes between the two children refuses to accept welfare, and Mina Anne
debates whether this is admirable or “false pride.” A casual dinner or two with
Dr. Louis Marquand, her boss, and then, at the book’s halfway point, it begins
to snow. When Mina Anne and her roommate Joan, trapped indoors for several days
by the blizzard, begin to snap at each other, wise medico Mina Anne chalks it
up to dehydration: “The department warned us of the possibility.”
But then, even
worse, the weather warms, and now it’s raining. And raining. The river is
rising, and Mina Anne sets out in her galoshes and mackintosh to rescue, well,
pretty much everyone: a man with an infected cut on his arm, a farmer and his
family, a cattle rancher and his family, the entire migrant camp, a woman
having a baby, a family trapped in a grove of trees, Paul’s parents. Just when
you think we’re going to have a minute for a sandwich and a nap, someone is
tapping on Mina Anne’s shoulder again and she’s off in the chopper with Dr.
Louie. Sixty-plus long pages later, it’s finally over, and suddenly Paul has
fallen madly for roommate Joan, whose “love would be an ever-burning searchlight
on the roiled waters.” Even worse, a marginal character takes Mina Anne in his
arms out of nowhere, and she agrees to allow him “to take care of her, not let
her take care of him,” if you think you can take it.
Peggy O’More Blocklinger, whose work we have seen before under the pen name Jeanne Bowman, is not my favorite author, which should not surprise the regulars. In Disaster Nurse,
she manages to do a little better than usual, which is still, clearly, not all
that great. Her condescending psychobabble is slightly less prevalent, but
we’re regularly treated to bon mots such as, “Premonitions are usually based on
logical deductions distorted by emotions,” “Paul’s poverty was restricted
vision,” and “This time I am thinking of our state inventory tax, of merchants
buying heavily for the Christmas trade and being stuck with merchandise and
having to pay taxes on what the weather kept them from selling.”
O’More’s main
theme about poor migrant workers could hold some interest, but instead of
making her points by showing them through her story, she hectors us with long
pedantic lectures. When Joan ponders why the migrant families don’t take more
pride in their admittedly temporary homes, instead letting them get so run
down, Mina Anne climbs up on her soapbox: “I think it is an inner rebellion at
their status. They can’t pinpoint the cause; it’s too ephemeral, ever-changing.
So they rebel against their fellow man.” Then Joan jumps on the bandwagon:
“They believe not: ‘The world owes me a living’ but rather, ‘The world owes me
the right to earn a living.’ And when they can’t earn it, they don’t blame an
impersonal escalating automation coinciding with population explosion; they
blame those who have managed to maintain at least the appearance of economic stability.”
Thanks, Professors, for elucidating these contemporary sociopychological tensions.
I feel so much better now.
I’ve never met
a Peggy O’More book I could recommend—unless it was so catastrophically bad
that it could be worth a peek, like slowing down when you drive past a car
accident (I’m looking at you, Conflict
for Nurse Elsa). This book is neither good nor bad enough to bother
with, however, so you’re best leaving this disaster to fend for itself.
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