By Margaret Howe, ©1958
Cover illustration by Harry Bennett
Jenny
Dawson was pretty, young and blonde, but she had absolutely made up her mind to
dedicate herself to her nursing career and to the little nephew who was left in
her care … Then, in her new job at the famous Merriman Memorial Hospital, she
met—Dr. Peter Hurley—broad-shouldered and serious-minded … and Jack
Merriman—handsome, wealthy, debonair … The story of a lovely and courageous
nurse who finds that life can be very
complicated indeed when one is devoted to a demanding career, and much more so
when one is young, beautiful, and admired by two very attractive and eligible
men …
GRADE: C-
BEST
QUOTES:
“The knowledge that Jimmie would never be a mental case cheered
her.”
“Jack told me I was silly not to have a pretty nurse. It’s bad
enough to be here, without having to watch a homely woman for hours.”
“A pretty girl like you shouldn’t dedicate her future to a
crippled child.”
“We’d better get out of here before the hospital gossips start a
rumor that they caught me necking with a nurse.”
REVIEW:
I have said before that a C grade is really the worst possible
grade for a novel: not so awful that it engenders at least some emotion, not
laugh-out-loud bad, and certainly not enjoyable, it plops squarely into the
category of books that there is absolutely no reason to read.
Nurse Jenny Dawson has inherited her nephew, Jimmie, a
four-year-old with cerebral palsy, from the boy’s mother Belle, after the
father, Jenny’s brother, died in a truck accident; “how callous and indifferent
Belle had been from the moment Jimmie was born. She hated him. She would have
put him in an institution.” So Jenny had taken him, then depleted her savings
and abandoned her job to travel around the country to see various specialists
to try to get him care. Merriman Clinic has gotten her one remaining dime for
“this last attempt to find someone who could help,” and sure enough, Dr. Peter
Hurley agrees that Jimmie has the potential to learn to talk, possibly even
walk. In return for his treatment, Jenny takes on a job as nurse at the
next-door hospital, caring for demanding matriarch Nora Merriman, whose money
has endowed the hospital, and who has broken her hip in a fall and “might
easily become a cripple” without proper nursing care.
Nora’s son Jack is a cad, flirting with everything but settling on
nothing, encouraged by his mother, who feels that nothing is good enough for
her boy. He starts chasing Jenny, who goes on dates with him and appreciates
his charm, but she is put off by his lack of seriousness. At the other extreme
is Dr. Peter, who is nothing but
serious: “He doesn’t seem to get a kick out of anything but his profession,”
observes Jack.
Well, his profession … and Jenny, whom he repeatedly asks out for
coffee, even starts hugging and kissing her, all the while telling her, “I
can’t allow my emotions to trick me into anything which might endanger my
ambition to be a successful doctor.” That’s why he likes Jenny, he tells her,
because she “expects no more than I can offer.” What a tease!
Eventually Jenny’s savings are wiped out and she worries she will
have to take Jimmie out of the clinic, where he now receives round-the-clock
care and therapy three times a week, which has somehow brought him to a vocabulary
of ten words from none. But Dr. Peter contacts some wealthy philanthropists who
offer to fund Jimmie’s treatment as long as Jimmie’s mother Belle agrees. Belle
smells the money that could be made off Jimmie, as Dr. Peter and the investors
are thinking of starting a national charity to benefit kids with cerebral palsy
and starring Jimmie on posters to draw public attention. (It’s a little weird
that either by coincidence or deliberate rip-off, the author has hijacked the
story of the Jimmy Fund, which
began a decade before this book was written by utilizing a 12-year-old cancer
patient to raise funds and awareness, even down to using the same name for the
boy with CP.) Now Jack, Peter, and Nora are all working to save Jimmie from
Belle’s clutches, all to win Jennie for themselves, as a nurse or a wife. Who
will succeed? Well, you won’t be shocked to learn that it isn’t Nora.
The curious parallel between Jimmie and Nora Merriman is only
briefly touched on, when Nora wails, “It’s the prospect of a future as a
cripple that appalls me.” When Jenny reminds Nora of Jimmie’s deficits, Nora
replies, “Thinking about others doesn’t make it easier for me to face the
future,” and flops back into her satin pillows and eiderdown quilts.
In the end, Jimmie is saved from his mother, who is essentially
bought off, and Jenny wins the man you know she will in the final three
lightning-fast paragraphs. The characters are flat and the writing is wooden,
which is surprising, given that Margaret Howe has put her name on the cover of
2011 Top Ten VNRN Visiting Nurse—though
she also claimed three other mediocre books (Special Nurse, Debutante Nurse, and The Girl in the White Cap). The
best thing about this book is the Harry Bennett cover, even if on my copy of
this book the printing register is out of alignment, making it look blurry and
alien. But what’s inside the cover is off as well, so that may be fittingly
appropriate.
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