Only her work as a
hospital nurse kept Noelle Carlyon from giving way to despair when her sister
Leoni married Timothy Yorke—the man Noelle loved. Knowing that Leoni was not in
love with Timothy made the position even harder to accept; Noelle could foresee
tragedy for her spoilt young sister. Then John Corringway, a brilliant young
surgeon, proposed marriage to Noelle, but Noelle, whose emotions were still
centred on Timothy, could not accept, for to her there should be no marriage
without shared, equal love. A trip to
South Africa gave Noelle time to clear her confused thoughts, but she had
yet to play a part in a tragedy before she found true happiness.
GRADE: B-
BEST QUOTES:
“Don’t try out your fatal charm on me. I’m much too
hard-boiled.”
REVIEW:
I couldn’t help, every time I picked up this book, singing
the Elvis Costello song: “I feel like a boy with a problem”—except, of course,
with a nurse instead, who here is Noelle Carlyon, and who has multiple problems
that must be sorted through. In the first half of the book, her problem is that
she’s in love with Dr. Timothy Yorke—but
he’s in love with her sister Leoni, and she’s
in love with a married man, in the most nauseating way: She’s abandoned her
career as an actress in London to come home and sob into her pillow for days on
end—and to agree to marry Timothy to go off to Nigeria with him, even though
she doesn’t love him.
Noelle, meanwhile, is sweetly courted by Dr. John Corringway,
who takes her out for long conversations and pleasant walks and hot tea. He is
smart, funny, kind, considerate, and gently presses his suit in a way that
genuinely won my own heart. Noelle, however, does not reciprocate his romantic
feelings, and the first hundred pages of the book follow her relentlessly
circular debates about whether she should marry a man whom she esteems greatly
but does not love. Frankly, it gets more than a little dull.
Eventually Noelle takes a gig as travelling nurse to a rich
woman who is going to South Africa to see her daughter, and though the back
cover paints this trip as a big turning point, it is really just a blip in the
story except that on the boat home Noelle runs into Timothy’s black-sheep
brother, Rory, and spends a lot of time hanging out with him. He is by far the
most interesting character in the book, a playboy two-bit actor (anyone else
see the impending connection?) who romances with lines like, “No girl has a
right to be such a bewitching temptation if she doesn’t expect to be kissed.”
Back at home, Leoni and Timothy come back early from Nigeria—he’s
abandoned his dreams to practice medicine there because Leoni has had a
premature baby and has fallen quite to pieces afterward. Timothy asks Noelle to
move in with the Yorkes to help tend to Leoni, who plays a wan, vapid
wraith—likely she has a bad postpartum depression, but here she just comes
across as a bigger baby than her newborn son, Bill. Now, finding out that Rory
is back in town after many years away in London (another big hint!), Leoni
becomes a wan, vapid wraith who seldom leaves her bedroom or stops crying—and
guess what!!!—Rory is the married man that Leoni had an affair with!
Gold-digging Rory continues to hang around the extended
family because Noelle’s parents are guardians of her orphaned cousin Judy
Temple, who is going to inherit a fortune when she turns 21 in two years, and
he plans to marry her money. Noelle wants to out him as a married man—although
whether he really is married is not
certain—and so save Judy, but Rory threatens to reveal that he’d had an affair
with Leoni, a fact that she has never told her clueless but devoted husband,
and will even throw in the scandalous lie that little Bill is actually his own
child!!! So, torn between her desire to save her sister and her cousin and
unable to do both, Noelle is stretched thin with anxiety, and seldom able to
see John, who worries that her stress is caused by living alongside a man she’s
in love with but can’t have.
The family is saved when a woman in London goes to see the
movie Witch of the Veldt and
recognizes a bit actor on screen, and her husband chases Rory down at the Yorke
residence to reveal that his sister is married to Rory. The cad, fleeing in
Timothy’s car at high speeds, surprisingly has a catastrophic car crash, and
even more amazingly survives, and even more shocking than that, develops permanent amnesia!!!! His wife turns up with their
four-year-old daughter to claim him, though it’s not certain how, with his
personality and all other physical abilities intact, he is not going to revert
to his bounder ways and give her the slip as soon as the casts come off. John
drops by to take Noelle to lunch, and—yet another major plot twist—Noelle’s
eyes “seemed filled with misty stars” as she tells him she is in love but not
with Timothy, and “what happened for the next ten minutes was entirely personal
to Noelle and John!” No bodice-ripper this!
Curiously, when John asks Noelle
why she was all tied up in knots at the Yorke house if it wasn’t over
unrequited love, she says, “John, dearest, I can’t tell you,” and that’s the
end of it. Further, apparently at no point does Leoni ever learn a valuable
lesson and tell Timothy the truth of her premarital adventures with Rory, and
never discussed is the fact that Timothy has abandoned his life-long dream of
practicing medicine in Africa. The transferal of Noelle’s affections from
Timothy to John is not really satisfactory, either, since there is no
description of her altering feelings when she is living with the Yorkes, or any
of her altering feelings toward John, whom she has seen about once in the
second half of the book before the fateful luncheon. Other than these oddities,
and the dullness of the first half of the book, this is a fairly good story and
reasonably fun to read, but don’t beat yourself up if you never get to it.
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