Cover illustration by Gordon Johnson
Young and lovely Dr. Star Lansing loved the wild Arizona country where she was born and raised. Here she dedicated herself to helping the poor but proud local Indian tribe, raising needed funds by treating wealthy patients at the exclusive Desert City spa. But Star faced an agonizing crisis of loyalty when dashing Air Force Colonel Whittaker Blake swept her off her feet. Whit was determined to install a missile site in the area, despite heated community protests, and he asked Star to be his ally. Could Star side against her own people? Could she lower her standards as a doctor in the name of patriotism? Was she truly loved, or merely being used? It took a dramatic medical emergency, and a startling revelation of character, to help Star find the answer hidden in her heart.
GRADE: C
BEST
QUOTES:
“What a gal like you
needs is a houseful of rambunctious kids.”
“Why would a
beautiful gal like you want to be a doctor, of all things? Nurse, maybe, until
the right man comes along. But lady doctors scare off the men.”
REVIEW:
Star Lansing is a
doctor who specializes in tropical diseases. Naturally, she’s decided to
practice in Desert City, Arizona, where she caters to the well-to-do folks who
come to the area for the spas and golf resorts. There’s a large population of
poor Indians on the local reservation, and she moans a lot about the abysmal
health care they receive, but she’s too busy cashing checks from her rich
patients to help at all on that score; her excuse is that she is burdened with
the large, insolvent family ranch that she has to keep afloat.
There are two men in
her life. Dr. Hugh McEvers is the other local doctor, but he is “disheveled,
charmingly irresponsible, and completely incompetent,” not to mention always
late, lenient with nurses, and indulgent with his patients. Impossible man! But
he’s fun to be with, so she goes out with him on occasion even if “Star wished
that Hugh might be more sincere, more reliable, and that she might permit
herself to fall in love with him.” Because Star strangely seems to view every
man, no matter how unlikely, as a future husband, until circumstances
demonstrate what the reader has seen at first handshake, that the guy is utterly
and irrevocably wrong for her.
Meet the other man in
her life: Col. Whittaker Blake, who has come to town to build the missile to
end all missiles, or maybe just the world. It’s called, curiously, Baby Doll,
and everyone is patriotically gung-ho about the project except Star. Her first
objection to the plant is that it’s brought a lot of foreigners to town:
“Poles, hillbillies, Puerto Ricans, Southerners, Mexicans, Armenians—” and
these ne’er-do-wells just get drunk and beat up the locals. Not only that, but
“movie theaters were deserted, except for the missile men and their bawdy women
who clapped through the serious scenes and yelled with mirth at the comic
ones.” To make matters worse, their jerry-built housing is causing real estate
values to plummet, and “even the Indian and Mexican household help had
absconded from domestic jobs, lured by the compensation” offered at the defense
plant. And Col. Blake just laughs at her when she brings up these hardships!
The nerve!
But he is awfully
cute, so Star quickly gets over her indignation and starts flirting, offering
to take him horseback riding out at her ranch, her pulse quickening: “She
wanted to know this man in whose hands all the military responsibility rested,
really know him.” So she dates him when she can, gets crabby when he doesn’t
call, and wonders “when would Whit need and want her as a loving woman? And how
long must she wait—wait—until every nerve in her body stopped quivering at the
sight or nearness of him and she could utter the words forever crying in her
heart: Oh, Whit—love me—love me!” Star is, in a nutshell, a shallow tramp.
Anyway, the problem
with this little fantasy of Star’s is that every time she’s actually out with
Whit, they invariably fight about how hard he drives his crew and how he
insists on sham physicals for the workers so as to prevent delays in the
schedule, as a regular exam would take everyone off the job for too long. And
he thinks Indians are “lazy and incompetent.” But that’s just a minor hiccup
for Star, who has visions of nosegays and white organza. She continues to
defend Whit, to herself and to the townspeople, telling Hugh that Whit’s “a
serious, dedicated person—one who should be an inspiration to all of us,” and
never mind about his utter lack of regard for a fellow human being.
Then, out to dinner
with Hugh one night, suddenly he’s the one her heart is all a-pitty-pat
for—maybe because Hugh looked “better groomed.” Amazing what a comb and a tux
can do for a guy, “something so tremendous, so steeped in magic that it was
almost unreal.” In a twinkle she decides that if Hugh proposes tonight she’ll
say yes, and I decide that I am thoroughly disgusted with Star Lansing, and the
book’s just half over. But the fairy-tale ends abruptly when the Colonel
crashes her date, so she tells him off—and this has nothing to do with the fact
that he’s been out dancing at the country club with other women, and she’s been
stewing over it for the last two chapters. Whit’s response is to ask her to
marry him, but though fickle Star “would have been filled with a joy too great
to deny a week ago,” now she’s not sure. “She had waited for him to call,
yearned for the sound of his voice—was it only a week ago? What was she made of?” An excellent question.
As with many VNRNs,
an epidemic pops up to put things to rights. Star and Hugh work relentlessly to
track down the cause—good thing she spent all that time studying tropical
diseases! It’s leptospirosis, passed around by a litter of puppies sired by her
own dog, so it’s curtains for all the canines, including hers—not to mention a
few of the missile plant workers, but it’s the dead dog that really puts the
kibosh on her lust for Whit, as now she holds him responsible for both the
dog’s death and the epidemic as well (though I’m not sure I follow her logic).
The rest of the dominoes soon fall neatly into place: A new health clinic for
the Indians, a happy ending for Whit and Star’s childhood Indian friend,
and—best of all—an engagement ring for Star! So everyone is finally happy at
the end: Star can die a happy and complete woman, and we can put away for good
this overly long novel about a man-hungry, shallow, and annoying doctor.
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