By Betty Neels, ©1972
Abigail was a true ‘Saturday’s child’; she worked very hard for her living. And it looked as if she could expect to go on earning her own living, for no one seemed to be in any great hurry to marry her—least of all Dominic van Wijkelen, who admired her as a nurse but who seemed to have no personal feeling for her at all—except dislike!
GRADE: A-
BEST QUOTES:
“Abigail took off her gloves and unwound her scarf and went
to find the kitchen, small and a little old-fashioned, with a gay gingham frill
round the mantelshelf above the small electric cooker and a row of pot plants
on the windowsill.”
“There was no doubt at all that pretty clothes did a lot for a girl.”
“Happy times are for remembering.”
REVIEW:
This is the fourth VNRN by Betty Neels that I have read, and
all the usual ingredients are here: The plucky 24-year-old orphan, here called
Abigail Trent, with few friends and no family, a hard worker who never complains—the
book’s title being a reference to an English verse, the book explains: “Saturday’s
child has to work for her living, and Abigail was a term used some hundreds of
years ago to denote a serving woman.” She thinks herself “not in the least
pretty,” failing to understand that her kindness, honesty, and smile (not to
mention a new pink dress) render her quite beautiful, indeed. She’s hired to
work in Amsterdam caring for an English woman with a gastric ulcer, and there
she meets Neels Standard #2, Professor Dominic van Wijkelen, a “giant of a man,”
handsome and 40, “arrogant and ill-humored,” always treating our stalwart
heroine “with the cold courtesy she had come to believe was the only alternative
to his ill-humor.” But she refuses to be overly intimidated by the man and occasionally
throws some sass his way, which clearly rocks his world view but makes him take more notice of her as an independent woman not interested in chasing his skirts.
Next is the Neels Standard Plot: Though he is nearly relentlessly mean to her, occasionally he is kind, and soon—here on page 54—“somewhere behind that forbidding manner must be the man she had fallen in love with.” And though “the professor was as likely to fall in love with her as the moon would turn to cheese” (wensleydale?), he does keep finding work for her that keeps her in Holland and him visiting her (patients) every day. Neels is likely to toss in a dance that he invites her to after which he kisses her and tells her, “You have almost restored my faith in women,” hinting at a broken heart that has kept him bitter and alone. There will be at least one child in the story, here Dominic’s three-year-old niece Nina, who requires expert nursing that he witnesses with extreme gratitude as she works tirelessly—sometimes around the clock—to be encouraged back from the brink of death.
In this iteration of the Neels classic, we are lucky to meet two delightful older characters, both much beloved by Dominic and who need nursing by Abigail, as well as a third who was a former employee of Abby’s family when they were better off, and before her parents died, to whom she is extremely devoted, planning to support for the duration of her career, and who is hired by Dominic to be a gardener and odd-jobs man. These elders we can see have wisely assessed the hurdles the relationship between Dominic and Abigail must clear and are working behind the scenes—sometimes literally, as we are not always witnesses to what we firmly believe to be their gentle hands on the wheel—to assist the would-be lovers to an understanding.
Ultimately it becomes harder for me to know what to do with Betty Neels. Though this is, on its own, an excellent book, it shares so many similarities with the three preceding books I have reviewed that it’s hard not to feel like I am getting the same whole cloth I have had before, just with a few different patches sewn on to differentiate it for the sake of the copyright laws. It’s a great book easily worth recommending, but I just wish I wasn’t closing the cover feeling that I’ve read it all before.









