Cover illustration by Tom Miller
Nurse Ellen Copeland suddenly
found three men in her life:
Tom Spendler, her boy friend
since high school, who was demanding she set a date for their wedding.
Paul Dixon, once a brilliant
author and now dangerously close to suicide, who needed her to help him write
again and to restore his faith in women and in love.
Dr. Eric Hendricks, attractive,
young psychiatrist and the man Ellen was in love with. Only he seemed more
interested in his work than in her.
What should she do about these
three men? She had to come to a decision. Should she marry Tom out of loyalty?
Should she sacrifice herself to Paul because he desperately needed her? Or was
there some way for her to make Eric see her as a woman and not just as his
nurse?
GRADE: A
GRADE: A
BEST QUOTES:
“This younger generation—well,
there simply was no accounting for some of the things they would do, at least
from what one read and saw going on. Driving souped-up cars, smoking marijuana,
drinking and boldly making love in public places, getting divorces almost
before the marriage had time to take. But then, in Miss Rutledge’s opinion, the
whole world had gone mad, what with all these atomic experiments and tornadoes
and floods and talk about so many persons secretly belonging to the Communist
Party, and the entire Government, after twenty years, being taken over by the
Republicans again.”
“A mother wanted marriage for
her daughter, but she wanted to keep her sons as long as possible. That old
saying, perhaps, that one lost a son when he married, while a daughter was a
daughter all her life.”
“Dr. Hendricks, being the
doctor, thought he knew more than the nurse. That might be, but sometimes,
Ellen believed, a woman knew more about some things than a man.”
“It did not mean anything—a
good-night kiss. Not any more. This was the atomic age, not the stone age.”
“Butch judged a man by his
handshake. And if he liked guns and that sort of thing.”
“She was the life of the party
and so much fun that no one cared how fat she was or what was the color of her
hair.”
“I presume an author can do
strange things and it’s expected.”
“Her mother was a dear, but
sometimes she got weird notions in her head.”
REVIEW:
Ellen Copeland is a
psychiatric nurse, working in the plush Park Avenue practice of young, hunky
Dr. Eric Hendricks, when one evening just as the office is about to close, a
hobo stumbles in, saying he needs to see the doctor or he will kill himself. As
the efficient front-office secretary tries to put him off until next Thursday, Ellen
steps in and invites the man back into a treatment room. Dr. Hendricks is a
good sort who actually sees the occasional pro bono patient, and he agrees to
assess the patient, even if it is after hours. Ellen departs for home,
convinced she’s lost her job, but the next day she finds that Dr. Hendricks is
pleased! The patient is actually a very successful author, Paul Dixon, who has
come home from the war only to find his fiancée has married someone else. He
becomes so depressed that he cannot write and is experiencing a psychosomatic
loss of sight. Dr. Hendricks enlists Ellen in caring for Paul Dixon, and takes
her out for dinner and dancing ostensibly to discuss the patient, which Ellen enjoys just
a little too much.
Ellen has a boyfriend Tom, who is pressuring her to marry him, but he
is moving to Tennessee for work, and Ellen does not want to leave her family in
Brooklyn. It’s fortuitous that he is packing up to go just as Dr. Eric is
moving in, metaphorically anyway—soon he and Ellen are dating every Friday
night.
Ellen is meanwhile helping out Paul by moving him out of his tenement
apartment into a farm owned by her uncle, where Paul is finally able to write.
Everyone is starting to get ideas about Ellen and Paul, particularly since Paul
is clearly in love with Ellen, and she is starting to entertain horrific ideas
about actually marrying Paul so as to further his mental
stability—especially since Eric finally kissed her and then immediately took
off to go on a cruise with a wealthy, beautiful divorcee and former
patient. Because a VNRN cannot exist without multiple misunderstandings, Ellen
believes Eric is pursuing marriage with the boating divorcee, and Eric and pretty
much everyone else, Paul included, is misled into believing that Ellen is in
love with Paul.
Naturally everything is sorted out in the end, but believe that the
ride is thoroughly enjoyable. Adelaide Humphries is a superlative writer, who in
her best books gives you a meaty bone to chew on, with many lovely characters,
painterly scene descriptions, and few of the more frustrating devices other VNRN authors fall on too easily—our heroine is never suckered by situations that
wouldn’t fool a five-year-old, never manufactures her own misery, never plays stupid mind games. A book by
Ms. Humphries, in short, is bound to be excellent, and in this one, she does
not let us down.
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