Tiny Pineapple

ananas comosus (L.) minimus

Nurses Three: Danger Island

by Jean Kirby (1964)
Nurses Three: Danger Island

A Penny Scott Story

“Where are her parents?”

Penny shook her head warningly at the boy’s tense question. The child who lay on the ground between them, not far from the burning train, was an orphan now. If her terrible injuries were to be tended, it would be up to strangers — people like Penny — to do what must be done.

First of all there was the complex and dramatic treatment of little Linda’s burns. When handsome Doug Redigo appeared, with evidence to prove he was Linda’s uncle, Penny was delighted to share responsibility for her young patient. But later, when the long shadow of doubt began to fall, she found herself committed to far more than a nursing assignment. She had embarked on an adventure that would take her across the continent, endanger her life again and again, and end, incredibly, in the darkness of an underground cavern.

Later Penny would recall that moment beside the burning train when she had looked down at the screaming child, and she would realize that it had been a milestone in her life and in her nursing career. More completely and more satisfyingly than ever before, she had allowed herself to become involved in the fate of another human being. She had learned to care.

Nurses Three: A Career for Kelly

by Jean Kirby (1963)
Nurses Three: A Career for Kelly

A Kelly Scott Story

“It’s never looked more beautiful,” Kelly thought as she stood in the moonlight and let her eyes wander over the vast buildings comprising Midwest-General Hospital. A sob caught in her throat as she walked up the drive to the nurses’ dorm. By this time tomorrow night Coleen Scott, Kelly to family and friends, might no longer be a part of the hospital world she loved.

It had begun as a wonderful year for Kelly — her first time away from family protectiveness. She enjoyed hard work in subjects she loved, and the chance to help patients who needed her.

Then the nightmare erupted…a whirlwind chain of events that she was powerless to control. First she found herself with a glamorous roommate bent on causing trouble — a girl who broke rules without a thought and had the aggravating ability to captivate Kelly’s special men friends. Then came the terrible accusation — the mark of guilt that could end her hopes and aspirations forever.

Shy, sensitive Kelly found herself fighting for everything she had ever believed in. It was a solitary fight — no father or sisters to help her this time — but she knew she had to win this one alone to prove her ability to stand on her own two feet.

Nurses of the Tourist Service

by Gladys Fullbrook (1963)
Nurses of the Tourist Service

Just as Paula had passed her nursing and midwifery finals, her fiance backed out of their engagement, and to try to recover from the blow she wanted to get away from everything.

Accompanied by her loyal friend Rosalind, she joined the Tasmanian Tourist Nursing Service. Her efforts were rewarded, for, in that smiling apple-blossom island, she found a new life, and a greater happiness than she had ever known.

Nurses Dormitory

by Alice Brennan (1962)
Nurses Dormitory

The intimate story of three nurses who loved the wrong men.

“Is it wrong to marry for money?” asked Nurse Miller.

“Is it wrong to resent your mother because she is a glamorous movie star?” asked Nurse Gray.

“Is it wrong to love the boy next door who thinks of you as a kid sister?” asked Nurse Leighton.

“Nurses Dormitory” is an unusually warm story of the lives of three young nurses and the men they fall in love with. Told against the backdrop of the wards, corridors and operating rooms of a big city hospital, there is an authentic insight into the scene behind the scenes and every character is as real as a favorite friend.

Nurses, The

by Willo Davis Roberts (1972)
Nurses, The

The book that does for the noblest profession what “Coffee, Tea Or Me” did for the airline stewardesses…

These are THE NURSES: six girls, young, beautiful, meeting life head-on…

  • Karen – oldest of the group, burned by passion at an early age, and afraid of the fire in her veins;

  • Gail – rich, beautiful, spoiled — unable to distinguish between love and lust;

  • Alison – cynical, free-wheeling, using sex as a bargain-counter commodity and her body as illegal tender;

  • Dawn – aloof and withdrawn, running from one scandal into the tawdry trap of another;

  • Lori – childlike, virginal, phantasizing [sic] about sex and unprepared for the realities of life;

  • Melanie – the innocent, dedicated to her work, her life almost over before it begins…

…and this is their story, and the story of the men in their lives.