(pseud. Dorothy Fletcher), ©1961
Cover illustration
by Jerry Allison
Her first
impression was a huge head with silver-white hair, a bristling mustache and
fierce eyes. It was like seeing the Eiffel Tower or the Colosseum for the first
time after having looked at it hundreds of times in magazines or on post cards.
Lily’s professional smile was frozen on her lips. Usually she would approach a
patient briskly, her hand outstretched, and introduce herself. She had been
taught how to do it in nursing school—with just the right amount of cheerfulness.
But this was a man who simply didn’t lend himself to this kind of approach.
This was a man who had terrorized the White House, a man even the President was
said to be afraid of…
GRADE: A
BEST QUOTES:
“The
most perfectly recovered patient necessarily suffers a relapse when confronted
with the bill.”
“Dr.
DeVries is still in Paris, isn’t he? Cutting up some important Frenchman or
other.”
“Do
you girls have to wear those white stockings? It ruins the nicest legs.”
“Can
you tell me, please, where to go, nurse? I have a bad case of breaking heart
and I need very special care.”
“People
in love are always a little bit nauseating.”
REVIEW:
This
nurse novel has it all: wit, intelligence, camp, brisk pacing, a bit of
intrigue, and—the cherry on top—a fabulous title and cover illustration. If you
read no other VNRN this year, make it this one (or Nurse into Woman; that would be another good
choice).
Lily
Sorenson has been chosen to special a patient whose presence at Physicians
Hospital in New York must remain top secret—hence his designation as “Mister
X.” He’s a lion of an international diplomat, along the lines of a Kissinger or
a Churchill, who will be negotiating a major treaty in a few weeks. If his
enemies find out he is in the hospital recovering from “a delicate operation,”
this might undermine his position at the conference and affect global politics
for generations to come, because he’s that
important. But his recovery is going to take weeks, and during the bulk of this
time he’s not allowed visitors, phone calls, newspapers, or television. And
that’s not going over well.
But
fortunately, Lily is an excellent and stunningly gorgeous nurse—Mister X is “a
connoisseur and a fervent admirer of feminine beauty”—so she alone of all the
nurses in New York stands a chance of subduing the great man, who has already
roared two other nurses off the job in as many days. Indeed, in minutes, after
denying him the newspaper he’s demanding at top volume, Lily has him eating out
of her hand. While this is a common plot device in VNRNs, Lily actually
deserves it. She banters cleverly
with her friends and colleagues, has no interest in giving up her career for marriage, and corrects a State Department official who
says that everyone who knows of Mister X’s true identity must keep his mouth
shut—“or her,” Lily answers smartly, endearing herself to me forever.
With
little else to do but sleep, Mister X soon takes an interest in Lily’s personal
life, which features a new young man, Andrew Carlton. Mr. Carlton is a reporter
who has heard of the hush-hush goings on at the hospital and, hoping to pump Lily for information, asks the nurse he is currently dating to introduce them at a party. He’s instantly smitten with Lily, and recognizes that this poses a
serious dilemma: Should he pursue the woman or the scoop? because he can’t have
both.
Lily
is equally taken with Andrew, and the pair spends a lot of time in silence at
her apartment: “ ‘Oh, Andrew,’ she said, after a while.” She’s feeding him
misinformation about her patient, as directed by the great X himself, who tells
her, “Compared to your love life, Lily, affairs of state become mere trivia.”
It’s a comedy of intrigue, deception, and even human interest as we—along with Nurse
Lily and Mr. X—watch Andrew to find out how he is going to play the cards he is
being calculatingly dealt. The story wraps up very neatly, with the final
maneuvering by Mr. X putting everything to rights, and the actual ending is as
pretty as VNRNs ever get.
The
dialogue is superb, starts early, and never lets up. You know you are in for a
great ride when Lily is called to the chief of surgery’s office on page five, and
a colleague asks if she has done something awful. “Let’s see,” Lily replies. “I
was picked up by a patrol car early this morning, lying drunk in the gutter.
But they can’t possibly know that already.” This book reminds me of Glenna
Finlay’s Nurse Pro Tem, in that they both feature that
snappy dialogue reminiscent of a film from 1942. The plot is light and easy,
but the question of Andrew’s character gives it enough heft to keep it from
completely blowing away in the breeze. It would be a perfect companion to a
preferably uninterrupted summer afternoon with cosmo, but don’t let lack of
either prevent you from enjoying this delightful little book.
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