By Nell Marr Dean,
©1960
Cover illustration by
Lou Marchetti
Young
Lynn Ryan was thrilled by her new assignment—hotel nurse at the glamorous Tamarac Lodge. Her duties
would be informal, and she’d have a chance to meet fascinating people—at a salary
that would enable her to help the family she loved. Lynn didn’t reckon with the three exciting
men who appeared, each offering his own brand of romance. Nor was she prepared
for the sudden challenge to her professional vows—a challenge to which at first
she could find no answer …
GRADE: B
BEST QUOTES:
“This climate has wrecked my hair.”
“She was unaccustomed to foreigners and their
continental manners.”
“Spanish people have very colorful names.”
“Today almost every girl at some time or another
thinks she wants to go into nursing. She feels it’s a way to do something
constructive—something within her reach.”
“Lynn
developed a wild curiosity to see the inside of a gaming house. Woman-like, she
planned a campaign to get Steve to take her.”
“Girls who are going to have babies simply don’t
engage in strenuous sports. Probably the reason you got hurt today is because
you were nervous.”
“Pearl
had just given her a shampoo and set, and she had the fresh feeling that always
comes with a new hairdo.”
“Being a very chic little redhead, Audrey was
indeed someone to be very proud of.”
“Kay, stop crying! You’re going to get married in
ten minutes. You can’t do it with red eyes.”
“ ‘Missy Ryan, come quick! I take you with me.’
“ ‘With you where?’ she asked, trying to cut
through his devious Oriental ways.”
“Any woman might as well face it. The
responsibility for creating a happy courtship is mostly up to her—just like
creating a happy marriage is. In fact, it’s about ninety per cent up to her. If
nine out of ten women weren’t such fools, they could get—and keep—the man they
want.”
REVIEW:
Lynn Ryan, wearing a cashmere coat and a warm
sparkle in her blue-green eyes, is awash in excitement about her new job at
Taramac Lodge at Squaw Valley . She’s a little
bit nervous about the job because she’s never set foot on skis, but is going to
have to be ready to dash out to the slopes at any minute to minister to a
hapless skier with a sprained ankle or a broken rib. But she’s going to
overcome her fears for her stepmother, Carmen Marie, who’s lived in poverty her
entire life: She’s spending her exorbitant salary—$250 per month—on a lot in
the Los Angeles suburb of Fernando Acres, where Carmen and Lynn’s father will
finally have a house of their own.
En route to the resort on the bus, she meets Steve
Matson, an engineer working to widen the roads to four-laners before the
upcoming Olympics. Later Steve drops by to visit and takes her out
snowshoeing—and they come across a wealthy hotel guest, whom Lynn had previously treated for intoxication
with lemon and honey and a cold bath, lying in the snow. As Steve races back to
the hotel to get help, Todd Gilmore tells Lynn
that he came out into the woods to commit suicide by freezing to death. When Todd
is safely packed back, she whispers to Steve what Todd told her, but Steve
completely laughs her off, as does the doctor who is treating Todd for
frostbite. After the amputation of a few fingers and toes, Todd is back at the
hotel recovering, and Lynn is dropping by daily to manage his care, and slowly becoming
his friend.
Her interest in Todd takes her to the new casino
he’s built nearby, and soon she’s won $3 on the nickel slots. You can see the
writing on the walls. Before long, Lynn
gets word that her father has been injured and can’t work, so he will have to live
off the money that he and Carmen were saving to make the next payment on the
Fernando Acres house. Lynn
doesn’t have quite enough money to cover the whole payment herself, so she
hustles back to the Pair-O-Dice with Wong Duck, the Chinese cook, and loses $195,
all but $5 of the money she’d saved. If that weren’t enough, she returns and
loses her entire $250 paycheck, just to put the icing on the cake.
Then, out on a date, Steve tells Lynn he loves her
because “you’re soft and sweet.” This might be a nice turn for Lynn, but no:
Steve very peculiarly becomes nasty and jealous of Todd after Lynn tells him of
her gambling losses, though his biggest accusation is that Lynn, on her routine
nursing visits to Todd, is being instructed on gambling techniques while she’s
there, the scandalous tramp.
After a week in which Steve doesn’t call, Todd asks
Lynn to drive him to a meeting, as he’s still sore from his toe amputations and
can’t operate the gas pedal very well. En route, he tells Lynn that he’s in love with her. He’s a lot
nicer than Steve’s been lately, especially when Lynn returns to the hotel and finds a ridiculous
letter from Steve, telling her he won’t bother her again because he can’t
compete with Todd’s money. Todd, desolate over Lynn ’s
kind refusals, gets drunk and flings himself off a cliff, and Lynn is forced to rescue him again. Safe back
at the lodge, Lynn is tending to him in the lobby when Steve walks in and
naturally transforms into a raging ass, making snarky remarks and jealous
assumptions without pausing to listen to Lynn’s reasonable explanations. Fortunately,
she has her friend Pearl
to give her sound advice: “What do you expect me to do? Keep fawning over
Steve?” she asks Pearl .
“If you love him, you’d better,” Pearl
answers. “Lynn, a woman has to make the fellow she adores think he’s the only
guy in the universe.” Ah. Thanks for the tip. Though it does beg the question
whether Steve is worth adoring.
This being a VNRN, however, that vital question goes unexamined. Instead, Lynn calls Steve and makes up a dumb story about needing medical supplies and then pretends she doesn’t know how to get to Carson City. She’s exulted when Steve falls into her trap and offers to drive her. She dresses for the drive—“for once he wouldn’t find her in a starchy white uniform, looking like a pillar of salt.
There’s a lot of campy writing and situations to be
found in this story. Its deep flaws—the insidious racism (see Best Quotes)
and the horrific attitudes about relationships—are pretty dreadful, but at the
same time they make the book more interesting, they give you something to think
about and cluck over, and be grateful that times have changed. I feel quite
certain that Steve is not going to make Lynn happy, but I also feel quite
certain, after Pearl’s advice, that happiness is not really the point of being
married; being married is the point of being married, and Lynn is about to
score on that point, so it counts as a success. Sometimes a book that makes you
irritated is not necessarily a bad book, and in this instance, that is
definitely the case.
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