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The Nightingale nurses series are one of my favourite comfort reads. When you open the book, you know that you will be thoroughly entertained with drama and ultimately a happy ending. Another great thing about the series is that we get to revisit certain characters (each book focuses on three or four main characters, with other former main characters taking a supportive role). I felt a bit dubious about reading a Christmas story in March, but ultimately it wasn’t a problem. The whole book isn’t centred on Christmas, but unfortunately for the characters, the Christmas of 1938 is likely to be the least pleasant one for some time. The book follows through into 1939 when war is declared and some difficult decisions are being made for both the Nightingale Hospital and its staff.
In this book, we return to Helen Dawson, a registered nurse who has suffered quite a lot in the previous books. This time her overbearing mother decides she should be ward sister in Casualty and what her mother wants, she gets. (Fortunately Helen is as good at nursing as her mother is at persuasion). Despite a rocky start, Helen becomes admired by the staff and she also falls in love again. But is it with the right man? (I’ll give you a hint – for quite a lot of Helen’s scenes, I was telling her not to be an idiot!) Helen’s friends, Millie and Dora take a backseat as married ladies. Dora makes an appearance (and she’s as headstrong as ever) but Millie is only mentioned.
We still keep up with the student nurses through Effie O’Hara, a lovable thing who continually tries to do the right thing by going the wrong way about it. She’s a bit immature, but I think she grew up a little in this book. Her friend Jess who we met in a previous book does make some short appearances.
Two older and wiser characters also come to the fore in this book – Matron Kathleen Fox, has some time to reflect and show she is very definitely human. Her good friend Frannie, sister of the male orthopaedic ward, also has her history revealed. But it’s when that history comes back to her in the present that she has to face the true meaning of what it all meant. I enjoyed being able to see the non-work side of these senior nurses; that they too have loves and stories to tell.
Reading a good series is like slipping on your favourite shoes or dress. It just works and you feel good. Donna Douglas has that power with the Nightingales series to comfort the reader, all while telling some history amongst some fascinating characters. I notice that she has a new book coming out this May, The Nurses of Steeple Street, which is about district nursing in Yorkshire. I can’t wait to read this – hopefully it will be more of the goodness that the Nightingales series has brought us.
Thank you to Random House UK for the eARC. My review is honest.
http://samstillreading.wordpress.com
In this book, we return to Helen Dawson, a registered nurse who has suffered quite a lot in the previous books. This time her overbearing mother decides she should be ward sister in Casualty and what her mother wants, she gets. (Fortunately Helen is as good at nursing as her mother is at persuasion). Despite a rocky start, Helen becomes admired by the staff and she also falls in love again. But is it with the right man? (I’ll give you a hint – for quite a lot of Helen’s scenes, I was telling her not to be an idiot!) Helen’s friends, Millie and Dora take a backseat as married ladies. Dora makes an appearance (and she’s as headstrong as ever) but Millie is only mentioned.
We still keep up with the student nurses through Effie O’Hara, a lovable thing who continually tries to do the right thing by going the wrong way about it. She’s a bit immature, but I think she grew up a little in this book. Her friend Jess who we met in a previous book does make some short appearances.
Two older and wiser characters also come to the fore in this book – Matron Kathleen Fox, has some time to reflect and show she is very definitely human. Her good friend Frannie, sister of the male orthopaedic ward, also has her history revealed. But it’s when that history comes back to her in the present that she has to face the true meaning of what it all meant. I enjoyed being able to see the non-work side of these senior nurses; that they too have loves and stories to tell.
Reading a good series is like slipping on your favourite shoes or dress. It just works and you feel good. Donna Douglas has that power with the Nightingales series to comfort the reader, all while telling some history amongst some fascinating characters. I notice that she has a new book coming out this May, The Nurses of Steeple Street, which is about district nursing in Yorkshire. I can’t wait to read this – hopefully it will be more of the goodness that the Nightingales series has brought us.
Thank you to Random House UK for the eARC. My review is honest.
http://samstillreading.wordpress.com
At first I wasn't sure if I'd even like this book. At the end of the previous book two of the three main characters graduated, got married and moved on although it did promise to show the lives of new students including the wild not terribly bright Effie and Jess who I lived in the last book. Instead the first few chapters were slow going. We meet Frannie a ward sister and close friend of the matron, Effie is also there but sadly no Jess she only makes a small appearance or two throughout the book, and the return of Helen who was sadly missed in the last book. But once past the first few chapters things start to get good. Although it says Christmas in the title less than half the book takes place around Christmas time. The story opens with Frannie seeing her fiancé off to the front lines in 1914, alongside his best friend John. Her fiancé Matthew does not return from the war which leads her into nursing. Helen is beginning to feel lonely and part of her is wondering if she's ready to fall in love again. But more importantly her mother has engineered her a promotion to ward sister in casualty, where she is met with resentment from Dr. McKay. Effie meanwhile meets a young patient and becomes a little too close to him, all the while working under the noses of her two bossy older sisters. The story picks up on Christmas Eve when a fire brings several young casualties into the hospital. Helen is nearly broken when she is unable to save a young child and begins to feel an attraction she is afraid of. Frannie learns the father of one of the patients is her fiances friend John and learns a secret Matron is trying to hide from everyone, and Helen runs into Charlie's cousin who is nearly identical to her late husband. The story carries on as Europe draws ever closer to war. The women learn and have to face some dark truths about themselves and the past and learn to take risks, the fate of the Nightingale is held in jeopardy as the shadow of war looms ahead, and no one including Matron herself are sure if they will be able to save the beloved hospital. The story ends shortly after war is declared as each of the women including my beloved Dora (now a mother!) decide what is best for them and their country now at war. As I said it didn't look too promising, but it got so much better and I'm glad I saw it through. I can't wait to see what is in store for the Nightingale during the war years.