pseud.
William “Dan” Ross, ©1965
“So I’m jealous!”
Nurse Gwen Hale remembered Dr. Jack Belson’s bitter words on their last date.
“Night clubs have a big appeal for you lately!” She had to admit it was true.
Her weekend job as backstage nurse in Tom Rapella’s night club had opened a
dazzling new world. One that was excitingly different from her hospital duties:
She also had to admit something else. Before she’d met Tom Rapella, her future
as Dr. Jack’s wife seemed settled. But Tom was irresistibly attractive. And
being near him did strange things to her heart …
GRADE: B+
BEST QUOTES:
“It seemed fame, fortune and faulty dispositions went hand
in hand.”
“You look especially tantalizing in your uniform.”
“I want a pretty girl like you who can hang around in
evening dress but be ready to jump to her first aid kit when she’s really
needed.”
“A person is bound to catch something from time to time. I’d
just as soon catch whatever I get from my dogs!”
“He’s an old rogue and a torment, but I’ll miss his lovely
flow of abuse. What a vocabulary!”
“You’ve got a bad case of what is delicately referred to as
romance.”
“If I ever almost fall in love again, I hope it’s with
someone as nice as you.”
REVIEW:
I usually pick up a book by Dan Ross, here writing as Rose
Dana (he also wrote nurse novels under the names Ruth Dorset, Rose Williams,
and Ann Gilmer, as well as under his own name), with more than a little dread.
I’ve reviewed seven of his books: five got a C or C-, and one each for B- and
B+ (Arctic
Nurse was the top scorer). But here, with Night Club Nurse, we have one of his best. It’s still just coming
in with a B+, but I’ll take it.
Gwen Hale is actually one of the finer VNRN heroines I’ve
come across—an independent go-getter who fights for what’s important to her and
always wins. She works at a Manhattan hospital on the floor for rich patients,
where she meets night club owner Louis Rapella and his son Tom. The pair
convince Gwen to take a job at the Empress Club just above Times Square,
working Friday and Saturday nights. She’s hoping to earn enough money to
finance a trip to Europe, which is “one of those things I’d like to do on my
own,” she tells her boyfriend, Dr. Jack Benson. Jack is initially shocked that
Gwen is serious about taking this job: “You wouldn’t cheapen yourself by doing
a thing like that,” he tells her, adding, “Cheapen me!” Which pretty much seals
the deal for Gwen.
But the big surprise is that Jack does not turn out to be
the usual VNRN boyfriend; instead of holding a grudge and making lots of nasty
remarks for pages and pages, he quickly accepts Gwen’s decision: “I give in!”
he tells her, and from then on is completely supportive. So I might forgive him
for giving her “a playful slap on the cheek.” Her blossoming relationship with
Tom Rapella, however, is another thing—that young man walks her home “arm in
arm” after her first weekend, kisses her, and tells her, “I’ve been in love
with you ever since I met you that day at the hospital.” For her part, Gwen
acts a lot more smitten with him than she has with her fiancé, thinking, “She’d
actually wanted him to say that he was in love with her,” and after they part,
“she found herself lingering over the memory of Tom’s goodnight kiss. There
would be no doubt in her mind if it were not for the others,” namely Jack and
the club photographer, Gina Norel, a childhood friend of Tom’s who, though Gina
has not let anything slip that might suggest as much, Gwen has decided is in
love with Tom.
Now comes pages of debate about which man, which kind of
love, she should choose: “Maybe her hours with Jack had been less romantic but
they had been filled with good things; the solid understanding each other’s
problems and each other.” Meanwhile, “Tom stirred her and gave her the feeling
that life could be more exciting than she’s ever dreamed.” And lies to Jack
about her dates with Tom: “It was all very casual and innocent,” she says of a
dinner in which the pair discussed whether they should get married. Jack, for
his part, is not falling for it. “Don’t play dumb,” he says. “I can stand
anything but that coy dumbness you put on.” Here again Jack proves his
worth—and his uniqueness in VNRNs—by not falling for a stupid lie and
preferring an intelligent, honest woman to a fake stupid one.
While Gwen is batting her feelings and Jack’s around, she is
also proving her value at the Empress Club when she saves a famous model who
has passed out—Gwen astonishingly recognizes insulin shock and gives her Coke
laced with sugar. After this brilliant diagnosis, it’s all the more shocking
that she fails to recognize impending disaster with the aging cowboy Buck
Gibson, who performs rope tricks as part of the evening show and complains of
worsening headaches, increasing shortness of breath, and decreasing exercise
tolerance. It’s not Gwen’s concern—“you should look after your health,” is all
she suggests as he staggers off stage sweating alarmingly after his act—but an
overdose of pain pills that gets Buck to the hospital. There Dr. Jack diagnoses
him with coarctation of the aorta, but in truth Jack is failing Buck as badly
as Gwen is—CoA is a congenital heart defect that narrows the aorta at its upper
end, and Jack describes Buck’s condition as a tumor compressing the aorta at
its other end in the pelvis. This little medical detail will matter little to
most, but it does indicate sloppiness on the part of the writer—not really surprising,
since we know this about Mr. Ross all too well from past books.
Of course it takes a big crisis in the end, when Gina trips
and falls down the stairs, breaking her ankle and rupturing her spleen, to
suddenly turn everyone’s affections in directions they had shown little
inclination toward up until now, and Gwen tells Tom, “I’ve known all along that
you couldn’t really part from Gina.” Curious that we readers were clued in to
neither Tom’s feelings for Gina or Gwen’s near-psychic abilities. More curious
is that after Tom tells Gwen that he loves Gina, he kisses Gwen on the lips,
but “it lasted only a short moment,” so I guess that makes it all right.
Though he does better than usual, Mr. Ross cannot avoid his
usual bag of writing tricks. He does enjoy descriptions of women’s bodies (though
it’s not clear to me why he thinks his readers will) and here we get Gwen’s
roommate wearing “a black-and-white polka dot housecoat over nothing much.” He also
loves to pick out one woman in the book and refer to her constantly as “the
dark girl”; here it’s Italian Gina who wins the dubious prize, though she only
gets it five times. Poor nurse Molly Pearson, on the other hand, gets a new
adjective, “buxom,” affixed to her name on seven different occasions. But I am
nitpicking a little here, though, since these tics don’t ruin an otherwise
decent book, and you can feel free to pick up Night Club Nurse with little of the usual aggravation that
accompanies Dan Ross’s books.
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