Doctor Justin
Garthorpe was reputedly a tyrant, and while Penelope worked for him, sparks
were bound to fly. And she had to cope with family worries as well as an
exacting job. Here’s the story of how she succeeded.
GRADE: B
BEST QUOTES:
“Nursing was the most worthwhile life in the world and she
loved it all, from the work that could sometimes be so satisfying and sometimes
so hard, to the friendly companionship of the other nurses.”
“Justin never thinks of the decorative value of nurses when
he engages them, although I’ve told him it would make all the difference to the
patients. Not to mention the doctors!”
“How encouragingly human you look! The starch and stiffness
have all evaporated into thin air!”
“He thinks of me as someone who helps him in his work, not
as a woman.”
“You’ve made me absolutely agog with curiosity. How do you
look agog, by the way? But I clamp my lips together and nobly forebear to ask
more.”
REVIEW:
Penelope Caril is a London-based nurse who suddenly learns
that older sister Alison and her husband Bill have been killed in a car crash,
leaving her guardian of nephew Sandy, age 7, and niece Grace, age 17. This
means she can no longer work the alternating shifts of her hospital because
she’ll need a steady schedule for the children, so she relocates to the coast
to take a position in a small children’s hospital founded by Dr. Justin
Garthorpe. He’s got a reputation as a strict martinet but a genius with
children and their illnesses, and during Penny’s interview with him, she finds
him “infuriating,” three separate times but nonetheless thinks “she didn’t know
whether Justin Garthorpe infuriated her or interested her. But, whatever her
feelings were, she knew she wanted to work for him.”
Not that you will be surprised to hear this, but soon she is
in love with him. They seem to have a close friendship, and he involves her in his
toughest cases, but he is also at the same time somewhat aloof—“what had
brought the brusqueness to his voice, the lines between his eyes and the streak
of gray to his hair? What was the mystery of his life—and would she ever know
it?” Of course she will, and it’s revealed by a shrew who calls herself mother
of one of their patients: Justin’s own daughter had come down with appendicitis
and the diagnosis had come too late, he had operated and she had died, and his
wife had died shortly thereafter of suicide. The scandal!
But Justin’s friend Simon has a slightly different take, and
explains that Justin had been working through an epidemic at the time on four
hours’ sleep a night, living at the hospital, and that little Barbie had been
seen by another doctor who’d blown the diagnosis. By the time Justin had
finally gotten home, Barbie was too ill to be saved. And the wife had left
Justin and died of an overdose of sleeping pills. Justin, of course, doesn’t
see it that way, and is so haunted by Barbie’s death that he can never love
again.
So Penny sets out to find the whole truth, and drags Justin
off to meet an old friend of his wife’s, who tells the real story—that Adele
had been on the brink of coming back to Justin to try to start over, but had
been troubled by severe anxiety which necessitated the fatal sleeping pills,
and her death was an accident!
Exonerated by the truth, Justin is free to tell Penny that
he’ll never marry again, but that he expects she’ll be happy with any of the
several beaux floating around Honeysuckle Cottage, where she lives with the
children …
It’s a slight, pleasant enough story, with a few interesting
characters (Penny and Justin, unfortunately, not being among them), but no
surprises of plot to make it particularly unusual—apart from the nurse’s dorm
fire that Justin extinguishes with his hands, blistering them so badly he
nearly faints from the pain, but strangely the next day he is driving around
the countryside and gripping Penny’s wrist, “the hardness of his grasp almost
bruising her flesh,” but apparently with no discomfort whatsoever. Rather, the
story seems to be a goodly number of the usual conventions strung
together—surly misunderstood teen made right by love, crabby doctor made right
by love, perennial bachelor and ugly nurse and crippled fiancé made right by
love. Still, if there isn’t much to it, what there is is enjoyable, and you
certainly could do a lot worse.
I find it interesting that the the cover art for this book was apparently so hastily assembled, the artist clearly reused another book's cover for the collage, without even bothering to fully crop out the previous book's author name. Via some sleuthing, I tracked down the source image to the cover for "Next Stop Gretna" by Belinda Dell.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I noticed that myself. It's curious that Harlequin, which was such a powerhouse publisher, produced mostly awful covers. I guess they figured they didn't really have to try, but it's still shameful.
Delete