By Valerie K. Nelson, ©1964
From what her dear friend Jeremy had told her, Nurse Jane Ashley had the worst possible opinion of his cousin Paul. What a hard, managing old man he must be, she thought, to try and force Jeremy to study for a career which did not interest him. “Sometimes you remind me of Paul,” Jeremy told her. “Like him, you’re fifty years behind the times. It’s that hospital and all those Florence Nightingale sentiments. I must get you away from it, double quick.” Then, Nurse Jane met Paul—and began to think that, if he was fifty years behind the times, it was not a bad place to be!
GRADE: C-
BEST QUOTES:
“You’re not going to faint or anything, are you? But perhaps
that’s another of the Victorian fashions which is coming back again.”
“Oh, you know what men are, my dear. So brief in their explanations that they’re positively maddening.”
“I thought nurses were always hungry.”
“Ordinary-looking people very often have some unsuspected depths.”
REVIEW:
This book has taken all the most overused VNRN tricks and
thrown them into one package: Orphaned heroine? Check. Wimpy, shallow boyfriend
nobody could possibly like? Check. Angry, domineering man more than a decade
older than her? Check. Spunky heroine fighting constantly with the arrogant
bastard and suddenly discovering she’s in love? Check! If all of this sounds
appealing to you, then this is the story for you!
If at this point you have any interest in learning more about this story, by all means, press on: 19-year-old Nurse Jane Ashley is in love with a shallow cad named Jeremy who is clearly lying to her left and right. She is in her first year of nursing school in London—so she does not even qualify as a nurse—when she is persuaded by Jeremy to get a job “nursing” his aunt, Meriel Darling, an imperious, wealthy hypochondriac who lives in a manor far out into the country. She sets out for the interview that has been arranged by Jeremy, only to find the house empty and a severe rainstorm coming on. Drenched to the bone with a cold coming on—and concerned that the woman she has been told is an invalid might be lying out cold on the bathroom floor—she gets in through a back door. While investigating the premises, the doorbell rings, and she opens it to start her first fight with 31-year-old Paul Rowfield (a creepy 12 years her senior, if math isn’t your bag). He literally drags her around the house with a hard “hurting grasp” on her wrist and accuses her of being the local burglar. Naturally, “he affected her in such a strange way … a different way from which she’d ever been affected before. When he looked at her, her heart began to beat faster, and she seemed to tingle from head to foot.” Sigh.
She lands the job—turns out she herself has weak lungs and needs six months in the country to recuperate—though Meriel doesn’t need any nursing and Jane is really just a maid. She continues to be bossed around by Paul, and Jeremy shows up now and then for clandestine, brief meetings in the garden in which he spoon-feeds her endless lies and she gobbles them up like they’re warm scones with homemade strawberry jam and clotted cream. “A man who wants to meet you on the sly hasn’t really much use for you,” advises Paul, who for once is making sense.
The local doctor, Robert Eccles, who had cared for Jane during her illness, has a sister Nina—a jealous wench with her hopes pinned on Paul, who recognizes a rival when she sees one—as well as a brother Ray, invalided at 26 by a severe heart condition. She also meets an ill woman named Iris Eccles, who suggests she is married to Robert, and a man named Brian Draper who “happens” to be on hand when Iris swoons from illness in a café and helps Jane cart Iris back to her shabby flat. Now there’s a number of mysteries to solve—who are Iris and Brian really? Who is burglarizing the neighborhood? Does Jeremy really love her?—shenanigans of Jeremy’s that Jane attempts to put right with little success, plus a very cold and businesslike proposal of marriage from Paul in which he completely fails to express in the most ardent language the violence of his affections, yet Jane can’t even turn him down flat and agrees to think it over. Toward the end of the book she comes to her senses as far as Jeremy is concerned, but that doesn’t stop her, oddly, from flying to meet him in the garden at every possible moment, never once putting off his tepid assurances.
Ultimately—and I hope you will not be too upset at the spoiler—Paul again insists they marry, telling her, “you must, you know. I announced our engagement an hour ago,” in “the same arrogant voice, but undershot with a world of tenderness.” Which makes it all better, of course, that he has essentially bullied her into marrying him—and has been scheming to do so from the very beginning: “From the moment I’d met you, I’d been quite determined that you were going to stay. I’d got Bob Eccles to see that you were given the post with Mrs. Darling, while I waited to get in touch with your guardian to gain his consent to our marriage. I’d thought we might wait until you were twenty, but now I’d decided that waiting was a waste of time.” Instead of screaming in horror and fleeing the county, Jane meekly agrees. Ugh!
The ultimate climax of the book involves some secret
relationships and crimes that I found difficult to follow, leaving Jane locked
in a lighthouse, possibly to starve to death or be assaulted (she decides she’d
rather leap to her death rather than have the man “put a caressing hand on her,”
such a delicate reference to rape)! But in the end, she’s found less than an
hour later, and feels “unutterably depressed” by her hysteria upon first being
imprisoned. I shared the feeling, actually, to a lesser degree, upon reaching
the end of this long, mediocre, insulting book that has little respect for its
heroine and less for its readers if it thinks that this is what we all would
appreciate in a love interest. And it’s not even really a nurse novel, since
Jane has quit nursing school and is not working as one! The last straw! So with
that, I can give you no reason whatsoever to spend any time with either not-a-Nurse
Jane or Cousin Paul.
No comments:
Post a Comment