Doctor Christina
Roberts was on her way to Lake Kampili in Kenya, where she was to join her
fiancé. But her careful plans went astray when tropical rains left her stranded
on the far side of the Umbulu River—in the company of the devastatingly
attractive Doctor Dominic Mount.
GRADE: B-
BEST QUOTES:
“I am at my least successful when in the company of members
of the opposite sex. Perhaps during our enforced exile together you can teach
me how to be a wow with the ladies.”
“You can’t embark on a career in medicine unless you’re
tougher than the rest.”
“Being ‘good friends’ can prove an interesting relationship
with no holds barred. You should try it sometime, with somebody.”
REVIEW:
Dr. Christina Roberts has a common problem: She’s engaged to
an ass. Melvyn is medical director of a nursing home at Lake Kampili in Kenya,
“where you deal with the fads and diets of large and lazy women addicted to
hypochondria,” so that’s not a good start—but more than that, he has a “tidy,
uncluttered, analytical mind” that thinks not at all about anyone but himself.
He’s arranged for Christina to spend a year working in pediatrics—to prepare
herself for the job of being his wife and mother of his children, no doubt—and
then they are to be married, “which would automatically sever her from her
brief, so far undistinguished, medical career,” and never mind the money and
years of study that went into the making of it. Fortunately for her, however,
she missed a boat and was delayed in her voyage from England to Mombasa Island.
This led to her getting caught in the winter monsoon, which had arrived two
weeks ahead of schedule, the inconsiderate thing, and washed away the Umbulu
bridge, so there is no way for her to reach Lake Kampili until the rains stop
and the bridge is rebuilt—in several months. Fortunately, on the road where it
meets the Umbulu River is a small palm-thatched hospital. Dr. Dominic Mount and
his spinster sister Cicely live and work at this hospital, and Dominic offers
Christina a job and a home for the months she is stranded, which she gladly
accepts. You do not need me to tell you how this story is going to play out.
You can probably even predict that a former girlfriend of Dominic’s, Dr. Delia
Courtnay, also manages to get herself stuck at the hospital, a clever plan on
her part to try to win Dominic back after she’d left him at the altar to chase
after another man.
A few surprises do land in our lap, like the fact that
Christina clues in early—and dumps early—her loser fiancé. Also a bit unusual
is that the star-crossed lovers actually marry halfway through the book, but
this is complicated by the fact that Christine contracts malaria on her wedding
day and is packed off to Nairobi to recover with Dr. Delia, who pulls in Melvyn
to assist in her plan to break up the marriage by making Christina believe that
she was too delirious with fever to render her vows anything but null and void.
The stock characters include the bitter spinster made bright
by a pep talk from Christina and a boyfriend, the evil vixen who attempts to
steal the man but who is eventually thwarted, the domineering (and properly
named) doctor Dom, the mousy little woman afraid to speak her mind, and the
shiny Fifth Avenue–type MD who caters to rich anxious, bored women. The
surprising thing is that this book is nonetheless fairly enjoyable to
read—except that it makes little of its location beyond the heat and humidity,
the rain, the flowers, and slight hints of the wonderful way Africans have of
personifying objects, such as when Christina’s Kenyan guide George points out,
“Bridge—bridge, him gone.” We get an odd take on racism here, where individuals
such as George and other Kenyan hospital staff are hard-working and intelligent.
Indeed, Dominic is praised as “a man who recognized character and achievement
in anyone and everyone”—while simultaneously dismissing entire groups of people
as “children,” so I’m
sending off another check of atonement to the UNCF
as my penance for reading racist books. If the plot winds up predictably and
the last page with a whimper, you could still do worse than to spend time in
the palm-thatched hospital, even if they’ve neglected to include the hyphen in
the title.
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