Doctor Anthony Collier
voluntarily renounced catering to a stylish clientele, and set himself up as a
general neighborhood practitioner. His aim was service rather than success. He
didn’t realize that certain of his patients would demand service of a kind he
hadn’t anticipated, and that idle women and neurotic men didn’t frequent only
specialists’ streamlined offices. A frivolous blonde office assistant with a
“fixation” on the doctor; a boy afraid of the draft; and a jealous fiancée were
a few of the cases Doctor Tony was called upon to treat. And in the course of
his treatments, he sometimes found himself personally as well as professionally
involved in his patients’ affairs.
GRADE: A
BEST QUOTES:
“I suppose I can stand it just once—being admired for my sterling
qualities of mind and character. Just so it doesn’t get to be a habit with
men.”
“Men think up much snappier stories on a full stomach.”
“I suspect the psychiatrists are all wet when they say sex
is at the bottom of the happy marriages, or the unhappy ones. Why does it never
occur to them that coffee is at the root of the problem? Imagine a man ever
leaving a woman who could make coffee like this.”
“When Betsy Jane dreamed of High Romance, she didn’t mess
with it. She really went to town.”
“Now look—what were we talking about when my fiancée
blew in like a wild tornado, and called you a slut, and the two of you mopped
up the floor with each other?”
“Rita looked like a gal on sinful pursuits bent, and as if
having made up her mind to it, she’d sin or know the reason why.”
“If he cut out dames, think of the time he’d have for so
many of the things he had always wanted to do, but had never seemed to get
around to. Reading up in the classics, for instance, in his spare time.”
REVIEW:
I wish I could tell you that this is the best nurse novel I
have read all year, or possibly ever. Doctor
by Day is, without question, an utterly fantastic book—but unfortunately
there is not a nurse or female doctor in sight; this book is about a male
doctor and his various girlfriends, so it does not count as a nurse novel. But
it’s just too good to let go without shouting from the rooftops that everyone
reading this should instantly hop over to Abebooks and procure a copy. I’ll
wait.
Now that you’re back, let me explain: Dr. Anthony Collier is
engaged to sultry tease Rita Shreve, a wealthy and controlling woman who wants
to transform Dr. Tony from a general practitioner into a highly paid, glamorous
consultant. He loves Rita and yearns for her badly, but is increasingly
displeased with the pressure she is putting on him. On one epically bad
evening, Tony’s secretary puts the moves on him, and he brushes her off. He
then takes a call from a piano playing milquetoast with an overbearing mother
and a terrible fear of his upcoming draft into World War II. Tony, fed up with
the weeping youth, suggests that he lose his virginity, which will make a man
out of him. Rather than follow this interesting advice, the mopey lad takes
himself home and attempts to commit suicide by shooting himself in the
shoulder, bringing the wrath of the boy’s mother down upon Tony. In an attempt
to do right, Tony goes to the boy’s house, where he finds his cast-aside
secretary feeding false information to the distraught mother and the boy
suffering from a minor flesh wound. He also finds neighborhood gal Kathie
Downing, who owns a tea room and is on hand to lend support. She steers Tony
away from the situation before it escalates further and brings her back to her
house to help buck him up. Once there, though, he realizes that she is a
beautiful, vibrant, kind, intelligent woman who understands him much more than
Rita, and he convinces her to allow him to spend the night with her. Yes, like that—a unique plot twist pretty much
none of our VNRN heroines would indulge in.
Back at the home of the suicidal boy, the secretary is
finally setting off for home herself, thinking about what more she can do to
destroy Tony. A clever lass, she decides to drop by Kathie’s home just to see
what’s what, lingers before the kitchen window for a while, and then goes home
with a satisfied grin on her face. Early the next morning, she drops a dime to
the home of Rita Shreve, suggesting that her young man would be so glad to see
her, if she could dash over to this little cottage right away. Well, needless
to say, when Rita arrives, fireworks ensue. This does put a bit of a damper on
the love blooming in Tony’s heart, and crushes Kathie, though she is a tough,
realistic lass and wastes no self-pity and few tears on the situation after
Tony bodily drags Rita from the house.
It’s just a matter of time before
everything is sorted out between these three, but in fact it really doesn’t
matter how all this is accomplished. Because in Doctor by Day, author Florence Stonebraker has absolutely outdone
herself. She should have won a Pulitzer Prize, or some similar major literary
award, for insanely brilliant writing in the genre of hard-boiled fiction.
Every page has a beautiful turn of phrase or a fabulous description: “He
thought of Rita’s apartment in that exclusive and frightfully expensive building
on The Strip. It had been done by an interior decorator with a French name, mincing
ways, and a national reputation for achieving strikingly unique effects. And it
looked it. It was so unique, and so definitely Hollywoodish, and so expensive
looking, that you felt like making a low bow when you went into it, and
apologizing humbly for daring to sit on the delicate, salmon-colored
upholstery.”
At the same time, the writing
also very evocatively describes the growing love between Kathie and Tony without
inspiring nausea and the dry heaves, itself an extremely remarkable feat (says
the intrepid guide who has read more than 250 of these books): “She had a way
of looking at you, and walking right into your life as she did it. There was a
warmth about her, and a sweetness. You wanted to tell her things.” The writing
evokes a slightly softer Dashiell Hammett: sharp, witty, and intelligent—and at
the same time charming, beautiful, and sweet. This book is an undiscovered
classic, and (alongside her other outstanding work, City
Doctor) permanently solidifies Florence Stonebraker’s reputation with
me as the pantheon of pulp romance novelists, nurse themed or not.
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