Cover illustration by
Bern Smith
After Molly Patterson
was jilted, she was determined never to trust a man again. But she was a very
attractive girl, and more than one man was anxious to make her change her mind.
Was Molly going to be able to stick to her decision?
GRADE: B
BEST QUOTES:
“It never pays to run away from anything, not really. It,
whatever it is, has a dreadful habit of catching up with you sooner or later,
and it usually turns out it wouldn’t have been one half so dreadful if you’d
stopped and faced it out in the beginning.”
REVIEW:
Molly Patterson
introduces herself to us as a bit of a moron: She’s about to quit her career,
less than a year old, to marry a man whom it does not take a reader experienced
in VNRN tropes to recognize as an ass—but then, it’s seldom that these men
aren’t obvious from the outset, though it’s not clear to me why it always needs
to be so, and why the heroines aren’t as clear-eyed as us readers. Is this lazy
writing? An author’s low opinion of her readers’ intelligence? But anyway, as
the curtain rises, Guy Vale is not listening as Molly speaks, his “thin,
too-clever face touched for a fleeting moment by a thin smile, then the
previous scowl was back,” “his dark grey eyes wearing the cold expression she
hated. ‘I don’t know what made me ask you to marry me,’” he tells her, right
there on the first page. The only reason the ring doesn’t hit him in the eye is
that he hasn’t given her one—oh, wait, that’s not how she feels at all! She
offers to take this really fabulous job she’s seen advertised to help with
expenses, but he explodes that she will not work! And besides, “anyone with a
grain of common sense” would not want that job, which “sounds like something
out of a story book—for five-year-olds,” he sneers.
Shockingly, Molly is
completely devastated—she faints, actually—when Guy breaks off with her (by
letter, the louse) less than two weeks before the wedding to chase a wealthy
heiress, so Molly ends up taking the job after all. Also strangely, she is
insulted when her new colleague nurse Annie Hart assumes that Molly “would
forsake her career for the first bit of masculine attention which came her
way.” To her credit, she instantly recognizes her own hypocrisy in that she was
about to do exactly that for Guy, but goes no further in her introspection,
merely stating that “I’m not interested in men. I’m over the love virus, once
and for all time.” You bet, kid.
Enter Paul Thanet,
barrister, and son in a very wealthy family that anchors the very small town
she’s moved to for this new job in the north of England, far from her former
life. He’s kind and solicitous, and very helpful when who should turn up
but—brace yourself, don’t want you fainting like stalwart Nurse Molly—Guy Vale
with his lady friend-employer Monica Blessingbourne, on an expedition to
strip-mine a really beautiful, enchanted piece of the neighborhood that was
sold after the son contracted polio and his prolonged illness and ensuing
disability proved very costly (this book being written before the advent of the
vaccine and the National Health Service).
Honestly, there’s
not much more to the story than that—Paul sees Guy forcing a kiss on Molly,
saying he loves her but not enough to give up his pursuit of Monica’s money,
the romantic fool—and there’s a bit of frigidity to be overcome after that,
figuratively and literally, after Molly falls through the ice at a skating
party, just having rescued Monica from the same predicament, and as she wakes,
Paul comes in the room and in his second sentence tells Molly she’s giving up
her career again, a lousy way of proposing, we quickly find.
The characters,
especially the Thanet family, are well-drawn and charming, and it’s a pleasure
to spend a few hours with them, as is to be expected in a book by Marjorie
Norrell, and in a rare treat she is giving us with Paul Thanet a love interest
who actually deserves to be one. The problem with this book is that it wants
Molly to be a strong, resourceful, confident go-getter quick to leap into
action—yet she is even quicker to leap out of her career the instant a man
darkens her doorstep. How can any reader with any common sense reconcile these
polar opposites? Can we cut to the epilogue in which a defeated and joyless
Molly is in the kitchen with a screaming infant on her hip, two toddlers
pulling at her skirt, a mostly empty bottle of gin on the detritus-strewn
breakfast table and a copy of The
Feminine Mystique in her raw, work-worn hand? In the end, I feel like I’ve
been reading propaganda intended to lull the female masses into a deluded
trance, to lure them into becoming willing participants in their own
oppression. If I’d had a say in it, I’d have named this book Throw off Your Shackles, Nurse Molly! in
the hope that Molly might stop letting men decide her life for her. But somehow
I don’t think Marjorie Norrell has that particular flavor of Kool-Aid in her
refrigerator.
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