By Jane Arbor, ©1954
Gillian Harlowe, staff nurse at St. Ranulph’s Hospital, had told herself over and over again that it was sheer folly for her to fall in love with that distinguished surgeon, Adrian Pilgrim, whose interest in her was obviously confined to approval of her professional skill. Worse – he seemed almost to welcome the idea that she might marry his charming, reckless young cousin Colin, while he himself was busy squiring the sophisticated (and very determined) Elspeth. Yes, she knew she ought to put him out of her thoughts. But it isn’t always possible to persuade one’s heart to listen to reason.
GRADE: C
REVIEW:
The cover illustration completely sums up this book: Plot devices
you’ve seen before, assembled with little skill, and achieving a mediocre
result. Those story lines we’ve met numerous times in the past:
1. The heroine, Gillian Harlowe, at 23 is fifteen
years younger than the man of her dreams.
2.
Dr. Adrian Pilgrim “had never given any sign
that he recognized anything but the trained dexterity of her hands,” but she
Gillian falls in love with him anyway.
3.
Gillian had been in love with playboy Colin
Fenmore four years ago, but he’d dumped her after a summer of fun—and now he’s
turned up in her ward after a serious car accident that may leave him crippled
for life.
4.
The only way Colin is going to pull him through
his recovery is if Gillian pretends that she’s in love with him.
5.
Dr. Pilgrim believes Gillian is going to marry
Colin.
6.
Gillian believes Dr. Pilgrim is going to marry
sexy vixen Elspeth Paul.
7.
The Ward Sister, Clarice Hugh, is a bitter, mean
shrew because she had lost her fiancé 20 years ago.
8.
Clarice is transformed into a warm, kind human
being when her ex-fiancé returns for her.
9.
Dr. Pilgrim kisses Gillian at the Nurse’s Ball,
but she thinks he means only to insult her by it.
10.
Despite a recent promotion to charge nurse that
she says means a great deal to her, Gillian plans to throw over her career when
she is married.
And that, essentially, is all there is to say about this book.
The writing is perfectly tolerable, but the story a straight, wide highway
through the desert: It’s clear where you’re going, and you’ve seen before what
little there is along it. I think the most emotion I felt during this book was
when the fiancé quotes Shakespeare’s Taming
of the Shrew to her in the final pages: “‘Thy husband is thy lord, thy
life, thy keeper; Thy head, thy sov’reign.’ Are you really content, my sweet,
to have it so?” And she replies. “It’s all that my life could ask—” It wasn’t a
pretty emotion, but it was one. If it’s not an emotion you would care to have
yourself, you might want to consider giving Nurse Harlowe the slip.
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