pseud. Florence Stonebraker, ©1968
Also published as Celebrity Nurse and Television Nurse
Also published as Celebrity Nurse and Television Nurse
Nurse Clare Kincaid
was caught in a web of conflict which was tying her in knots. Dr. Hal Grove,
the handsome, brainy, rich psychiatrist, was in love with her, but he would not
take on the responsibility of the child who had become so much a part of her. How
could Clare leave Tracy, the five-year-old daughter of her adoptive brother
Larry? The child was hungry for love and clung to her. Yet Larry, though
charming, was totally irresponsible, while holding onto his hope of marrying
Clare. To complicate matters still more, Jeff Haymes, a TV personality in
Clare’s care, was making sensational proposals to her and extravagant promises
to Tracy. Clare had to make a choice. How could she be sure she was making the
right one?
GRADE: C-
BEST QUOTES:
“‘You should wear that white swim suit around the hospital,’
Jeff Haymes told Clare. ‘The male patients would have no further need of wonder
drugs.’”
“Try some hot compresses on your heart. See if you can’t
warm it up while I’m gone.”
REVIEW:
I love author Florence Stonebraker (here writing as Florence
Stuart) so much that I am reluctant to actually read her books because it means
there will be one less for me to enjoy (it took me more than a decade to read
the last Jane Austen). I needn’t have held off with this one, because enjoy it
I did not.
Here we have nurse Clare Kincaid, at 25 a well-established
nurse who has managed to hook desirable Dr Hal Grove, a 38-year-old former
confirmed bachelor psychiatrist of the Park Avenue type, with a thickly
carpeted office suite and highly bankrolled female clientele—we know the type
all too well, and he never turns out well, does he, readers? Particularly since
in this case he’s a psychiatrist, as author Florence does love a psycho
psychiatrist (see also A Nurse Named Courage). The writing
is writ especially large here because
Clare is effectively the guardian of her five-year-old niece, whose mother is
dead and whose father, Clare’s adopted brother Larry, has abandoned the girl. Little
Tracy is now living with Clare and mother Rose, who has suffered several heart
attacks and as a result is a near invalid likely to keel over at any second.
Clare is essentially a mother to Tracy, but Dr. Hal has absolutely refused to
accept Tracy into his home when he and Clare are married. Clare spends a lot of
time worrying about what to do—give up Tracy for adoption? Dump Hal and fast is
not high on her list of options, unfortunately, though the reader is completely
unable to see why.
At work Tracy is caring for wealthy television show star
Jeff Haymes, who hosts a sort of gotcha-type program where “he gets people up
to interview them; then all he does is make fools of them. He’s made a big name
just by insulting people.” Many nurses are won over by Jeff, but not Clare:
“She did not imagine she could ever possibly like Jeff as a person.” This
means, of course, that they’ll be engaged at book’s end. If Clare is not
impressed, Tracy is: Clare had brought Tracy to work one day to cheer up the
patients, and never mind how wildly inappropriate that is, but now Tracy is
smitten with—brace yourself—“Unk Jeff,” who wants to take her to Disneyland for
her birthday.
Though no one has ordered a psych consult, Hal takes it upon
himself to interview Jeff, who is recovering from his second plane crash, and
tells Jeff that he has suicidal tendencies. Jeff responds by beaning Hal on the
head with a crystal ball, and I am not kidding, which makes me think Hal may
have a point. And now Hal is insisting Clare stay away from Jeff—but she goes
to his room to tell him to stop making empty promises to her lonely little niece.
Instead Jeff turns the tables and asks Clare about her own empty promises to
Tracy, whom she is considering abandoning to strangers when she marries Hal.
Jeff then suggests that he could get Tracy some work in TV commercials so Clare
could afford to hire a nanny to look after Tracy while she’s at work. Despite
herself, Clare starts to think this Jeff guy isn’t so bad …
Especially after her next date with Hal, when he says he’s
arranged the adoption for Tracy that Care had not even agreed to, that he’s
taken a job in the Midwest and Clare can come too, get a job, and undergo
psychoanalysis—and when she’s cured of her “neurotic attachment to her little niece,”
they can be married. Clare rightly calls Hal “a smug, self-centered,
swollen-headed creep”—but it that the end of the engagement? Heck, no! It’s not
even the end of the date! She lets Hal drive her home, but “there were not
let’s-kiss-and-make-up embraces,” which teaches Hal to be a better person.
Or maybe not, because before long, we are questioning Hal’s
sanity—and you knew we would. “He ranted and raved; he paced the floor and
pounded his fists on the semi-circular metal desk. His face thinned; his cheeks
turned a purplish hue.” And we’re only on page 72. There’s still a lot of plot
to get through, such as Larry’s very alarming pass at his sister Clare, his
decision to take Tracy back and make a lot of money off her impending TV
career, Hal’s idea to kidnap Tracy with Jeff’s help, Clare and Tracy’s several appearances
on Jeff’s show, including one in which Jeff proposes to Clare on air. In the
end, there’s a big showdown in which Tracy is shot “just a fraction above her
heart,” and though the injury is described as “just a flesh wound,” but she
really whacked her head when she fell down and has been in a coma and on the
critical list for a week, and “almost didn’t make it.” Nevermind about gunshot
wounds; it’s those bumps on the head that will really kill you.
So many elements of this story are the usual tricks from
author Florence Stonebraker’s repertoire: the psycho (Nurse Under Fire, The Nurse from Alaska, and of course
Psychiatric Nurse), the unwanted yet
fiercely fought-over child (The Nurse from Alaska, Runaway Nurse), the adopted daughter
(Ozark Nurse). There is none of the
gorgeous writing that she can be capable of (run, do not walk, to find City Doctor and Doctor by Day), and here she’s
developed an annoying habit of dropping the quotation marks halfway through a
quote and paraphrasing the remainder of the remarks. The characters are not
particularly likeable, as Clare is a pathetic pushover who on one hand claims,
“I can take care of myself,” but on the other can’t figure out that Hal is a
horrible person. Even Jeff, the supposed love interest, is far too arrogant and
pushy, telling Clare within minutes of their first meeting that he looked into
the crystal ball and “this girl appeared in the crystal, plain as anything. And
she had big, beautiful, golden eyes, exactly like yours. Now what do you make
of that, sweetheart?” His on-air proposal to Clare screams of an overly
controlling stalker, and his attentions to Tracy are too much to be anything
but disturbing. This is actually the worst-rated Stonebraker novel of the 16 of
her books I’ve read. If you’ve got others on your shelf, don’t bother pick up
this one—not even the cover is worth looking at.
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