Poppy Helden had never forgotten her promise to return to her
hometown as a nurse in the little clinic there. But Miami Beach, where she was
training, had many distractions. There was the warm lazy sunshine of the beach,
and the beguiling attentions of young Dr. Steve Harper. When Poppy’s singing
idol, Nicky Farrell, became her patient in the Celebrity Suite, Poppy’s heart
began to beat to a new and different tune and she was caught in a clash of conflict
… in which both her love and career hung in the balance.
GRADE: C+
BEST QUOTES:
“We certainly don’t want an interne around who’s slightly psycho.”
“You look much too unworried to be a doctor.”
“Poppy—don’t fall in love with somebody famous before I get you
down to the chili parlor tonight—okay?”
“If I’m running a fever, baby, you’ve got only yourself to blame.”
“Goodness, she thought suddenly, men can certainly
complicate a girl’s life!”
“I’ll bet a wife like you could save a guy millions of dollars a
year. I’ll bet you watch for all the sales and I’ll bet you can cook.”
“Stop behaving as if you’re still a silly student nurse, dying to
get married!”
“There are very few girls who look really pretty in the early
morning.”
REVIEW:
On page one, Poppy is a new graduate, a hard-working hillbilly
from a hardscrabble town in the Georgia mountains who borrowed money from the
hometown doctor to complete her training. She’s sworn to return home to work
after her training, but she’s planning to take one more year at Marymount-on-the-Beach
Hospital in Miami Beach to gain a little more experience before packing her
bikinis and heading home to the mountains. Unfortunately for her, the nursing
supervisor has decided that the experience our little waif really needs is with
the idle rich: She’s been assigned to the celebrity suite, where she will tend
to just one patient at a time.
She’s not too excited about this, as she had hoped to be a little
busier. But nursing supervisor Isabel Duncan has other plans. “I think, with
the life you have planned,” she explains to Poppy, “that seeing the so-called
pampered darlings of the world with their masks off, will do you good.” Why the
hospital would waste the skills of someone who is acknowledged to be the most
dedicated graduate they’ve seen in years on private duty with just one patient to
teach her this trifling life lesson is perplexing.
But then, when Poppy gets one look at pampered darling Nicky
Farrell, a singing sensation checked in with fatigue to rule out leukemia, it
doesn’t do her good at all—she’s suddenly, unprofessionally, off her head over
the poor, possibly dying boy, leaving the hospital after her first shift to go
sit on the beach and brood all night over him—missing her date at the chili
parlor with Dr. Steve Harper. This is a blow to the young interne, who has been
planning to marry Poppy for quite some time, though up to this point she’s
refused to consider herself “his girl.” Now she’s staying late after shifts to
visit Nicky, her heart hammering wildly every time she pulls a thermometer from
her pocket and pops it in his mouth (cringe), swooning when he tells her he’s
in love with her, and, on her third day on duty, dancing with him and kissing
him. She’s very confused: “Which man do I belong to?” she asks herself, as if
she should belong to anyone, especially a patient she just met 72 hours ago.
Now we enter the middle of the book, which is mainly a lot of
moping about whether Nicky loves her, whether she loves Nicky, her feelings for
Steve—the fact that she has previously declared that she has none beyond
friendship notwithstanding—and “her duty towards the two men who cared about
her!” We learn fairly early on that Nicky just has a “glandular infection,” not
a fatal illness, but he still insists that he’s in love with Poppy and wants
her to come on tour with him. His manager, Joe, fruitlessly tries to warn Poppy
that Nicky will leave her for his true love, performing, and tells her that
Nicky always thinks he’s in love—the last time to a “crazy chick” who tried to
kill herself with sleeping pills after he left her, and whom he never visited
when she was in the hospital recovering, the selfish lout.
And Nicky now reveals that he thinks that his manager Joe only
cares about him for his money, though it’s clear that’s far from the case—and
Poppy wonders, “What if that worked both ways? Suppose that Nicky, feeling that
no one could truly love him for himself, was unable to love back?” Quite a
stretch, but we have to have some reason for Poppy to decline his marriage
proposal—the fact that she’s known him less than a week apparently not
sufficing.
Then Luzette Theibou, a French actress who is all the rage in
Hollywood, checks in. “She comes to the hospital every time one of her
boyfriends doesn’t jump when she tells him to. She tried the sleeping pill
routine” when her last romance ended, Poppy is told—and the startling
coincidence between her recent escapade and Nicky’s last girlfriend’s suicide
attempt is never explained, though it seems Nicky and Luzette had never met.
Sloppy plotting, apparently. Then, when Poppy discovers the patients
slow-dancing in the Sun Lounge and Nicky insults Poppy by telling her to bring
them some Cokes, it appears Poppy’s “relationship” is on the rocks, because
“when a boy told girl he cared, and then proceeded to dance with another girl
as if there were no tomorrow, it could be pretty darned confusing!”
Suddenly Steve is looking better, but not much: “She didn’t feel
that wild and wonderful way around him that she felt in Nicky’s presence, but
still, Steve was somebody very nice and comfortable to be with. Like houseshoes,
she thought, and she flushed. It didn’t seem like a very complimentary
comparison.” Indeed. “Was this love? The easy, friendly, comfortable, quiet
thing, where two people sat watching a calm ocean, where two people talked of
medicine more than of love or passion, where two people could not see each
other for days and when they did, feel as comfortable as they had the moment
they left each other.” I hate this device, where the author tries to convince us
that friendship is a better foundation for marriage than passion. Call me a
romantic fool, but it comes across as lowering your expectations, as putting
matrimony ahead of personal happiness: Better to marry a nice man who wants you
than remain single and hold out for a man you really love.
When Nicky is released from the hospital, he invites Poppy to come
to a concert, and seats her at a table in the front, replete with flowers and a
quick visit before the curtain goes up. “You know what? I was hoping you’d wear
a white dress tonight,” he tells her. “In your white nurse’s uniform, you
looked so pretty. White becomes you.” Poppy immediately feels this means that
Nicky only loves her as a nurse—but she’s saved from awkwardly running out the
door when Luzette crashes the party and seats herself at Poppy’s table, and
tells Poppy that she’s in love with Nicky, whom she’s known for only a day—this
guy is really something else! Poppy kindly tells Luzette that it will take time
for her to convince Nicky that she really loves him, due to his “seeming
inability to accept love,” but that they will be married by spring—so it won’t
take that much time, after all.
On her way out of the music hall, however, there’s a bloody
disaster, and Poppy calmly saves the patient and calls for an ambulance.
Arriving at the hospital, they’re met by Dr. Steve—and now it’s the young
doctor who is making Poppy’s heart miss a beat, nauseatingly enough.
This book has two fundamental and conflicting problems: Too much
going on, and not enough. The central anguish we are subjected to for pages and
pages—so much somber wallowing about who loves whom and whether it’s real or
not—seems foolish when the relationship is silly and inconsequential and
reduces our heroine to some very tacky, not to mention unprofessional,
behavior. The questions about whether Nicky is capable of love, whether Poppy’s
feelings for Ole Houseshoes Steve is real love, even the question whether
Luzette is the old flame of Nicky’s who tried to kill herself, just clutter the
story in an unhelpful way, because the story should be about a real
relationship developing between Poppy and Nicky so we can find out if what they
feel is substantial and long-lasting or just one of those things. As we have
it, this is a trivial story about a pair of shallow individuals who just latch
onto whatever is convenient.
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