What the gossips said
about Dr. Holland’s nurse and his handsome young assistant wasn’t true … Kim
Sargent was engaged to Bill Holland, a brilliant doctor much older than she.
The lovely nurse admired and respected her fiancé, was sure she could be happy
with him, make their marriage a success, and learn to love him as much as he
loved her. Then one day a young doctor named Reid Coleman walked into her life.
And Kim knew, heartbreakingly, too late, that he was the man she should have
waited for!
GRADE: C+
BEST QUOTES:
“Pop’s comfort and Elaine’s education were being bought at
the price of her probable spinsterhood. Hopeless, because by the time Elaine
finished high school and nurse’s training, Kim would be in her thirties … a
stranger to fun, an unlikely prospect for marriage.”
“A guy’s never interested in a girl unless she’s getting the
rush act from at least six other fellows.”
“I adore you, Kim. You make such beautifully wifely noises.”
REVIEW:
Here we have yet another entry for the VNRN trope of being engaged
to the wrong man, plus a devastating illness to keep the heroine roped into the
bad bargain as an added bonus. Nurse Kim Sargent works for Dr. Bill Holland,
who is a brilliant, single-minded loner of uncertain age, but nearing his fifties—practically
dead! Speaking of dead, so are Kim’s hopes for marriage because, at 26, she is
approaching the cliff of spinsterhood with no hope of escape: She’s supporting
the household with her job at Dr. Holland’s office, just three blocks from her
house, from which she can regularly look in on her father, wheelchair-bound
these several years after the car crash that killed Mrs. Sargent and every mote
of joy in the house. It’s not clear why she feels she has “dismal chances for
romance and marriage in the dull, provincial town” of 11,000, except that she
seems convinced that she should either be at work or at home caring for her
father. But here is the dubious scenario, and when Dr. Holland proposes on page
17, he points out that he can finance her father’s care and her sister’s
education, and that “as Mrs. Holland, she would enjoy an undreamed-of security,
an enviable position in the community.” So she agrees.
Immediately it becomes obvious even to Kim that this is a
bad idea, and she realizes, “she loved Bill Holland … like a father.” Her biological father and sister go ballistic, but
she will not be dissuaded: “I’ve already committed myself,” she says, because
no one is ever allowed to change their minds. To prove the point that it’s a
bad match, the happiest of men immediately commences to building an enormous
house and excludes Kim from all planning and meetings with the architect. If
that isn’t sign enough, Bill flings himself into work even more furiously than
before, which means they never go out and he doesn’t bother to come around to
the Sargent house to meet her family. But she gets used to “her strangely
placid, semiformal engagement to marry Bill Holland. It would be a pleasant
life, she decided. It would be devoid of excitement or momentous challenges,
and perhaps it would lack (as it did now) the thrills young lovers
encountered.” Sounds swell!
Whom Kim does encounter is Dr. Reid Coleman—“just a kid” at
27, says Dr. Holland, tactlessly forgetting that Kim is younger than that. Reid
has signed up to be Bill’s partner at the clinic, and 11 pages after meeting
the hot and hunky doctor, Kim realizes that “Reid Coleman brought out in her
all the symptoms Pop had ascribed to love.” Virtually nothing except casual
conversation precedes this announcement, so it’s a bit bewildering, though not
for one second surprising; we wise VNRN readers knew poor Mr. Bill was doomed
from the minute he proposed. To her credit, Kim decides she’s going to tell
Bill the truth, but guess what??? Before she has a chance to drop her bomb, Bill
suffers a debilitating stroke and is paralyzed and unable to speak. “If Bill
survived, she would never let him know how close she had come to breaking his
heart,” she decides. “Committed to a loyalty deeper than love, she would be
waiting for him when and if he recovered.” We’ll see about that!
Now working with Reid every day, she quickly realizes that
“this was the kind of love you experience only once in your lifetime, and when
it goes unreciprocated and unrealized, you never find it again.” We’re barely
halfway through the book, so we have to endure countless visits with speechless
Bill, nasty but entirely true rumors in town about Reid and Kim, longing
glances from Reid, and numerous tears from Kim. Eventually a widowed nurse a
lot closer to Bill’s age is hired to help with Bill’s speech therapy, and
exactly no one will be surprised that when Kim eventually works up the guts to
tell Bill she is in love with Reid, he beats her to the punch and stutters that
he’s in love with the sweet, unassuming Wilma Ellison. At book’s close, Reid and
Kim go parking and decide that “older people, like Bill and Pop, like you to
believe they know what’s best for you,” and that “usually they do.” Given that
the entire premise of this book was about how to escape Bill’s grossly
inaccurate belief that he knew what was best for Kim, it just leaves you
scratching your head.
This bland, uninteresting book has little to offer in the
way of interesting characters outside of the trashy, loudmouthed office
secretary. The plot is trite and ridiculously predictable. The writing is not
overtly bad but certainly not anything special, either. In short, if perfectly
serviceable, it’s not really worth the effort.
Thanks for reading all these books, so we don't have to, but we can still enjoy the best lines and eye rolls.
ReplyDeleteThis blog has now been added to my weekly Sunday treats.
Thanks for your kind words! Enjoy!
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