Difference between revisions of "Scatterbrains-Student Nurse"
(New page: Category:1963 ReleasesCategory:Category Romance <!--add the correct year--> {| cellpadding="2" style="border:3px solid lightgray; font-size:86%" align="right" |- | colspan="2" alig...) |
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| valign="top" width="75px" | '''Publisher''' ||width="100px" | [[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] [[Mills and Boon Romance By The Numbers|#147]] | | valign="top" width="75px" | '''Publisher''' ||width="100px" | [[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] [[Mills and Boon Romance By The Numbers|#147]] | ||
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− | | valign="top" | '''Release Month''' || 1963 (UK) | + | | valign="top" | '''Release Month''' || August 1963 (UK) |
|- style="background:lightgray" align="center" | |- style="background:lightgray" align="center" | ||
| colspan="2" | '''[[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] Series #''' | | colspan="2" | '''[[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] Series #''' | ||
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* '''Author''': [[Margaret Malcolm]] | * '''Author''': [[Margaret Malcolm]] | ||
* '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] [[Mills and Boon Romance By The Numbers|#147]] | * '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] [[Mills and Boon Romance By The Numbers|#147]] | ||
− | * '''Year''': | + | * '''Year''': 1963 |
==Book Description== | ==Book Description== |
Revision as of 16:32, 10 May 2011
By Margaret Malcolm | |
Publisher | Mills & Boon Romance #147 |
Release Month | August 1963 (UK) |
Mills & Boon Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | Ward Hostess |
Followed by | A Case In The Alps |
- Author: Margaret Malcolm
- Publisher: Mills & Boon Romance #147
- Year: 1963
Book Description
Jo Hewitt, known as Scatterbrains - and with the best of reasons! - to all her family and friends, did not seem on the face of it to be the stuff from which good nurses are made. But there had already been two generations of nurses from her family at St. Magnus's Hospital, and Jo knew how bitterly disappointed her mother and grandmother would be if she did not keep up the tradition. So she bravely took the plunge. She soon found that she had been right to be apprehensive. Absentmindedness and carelessness became major crimes when a patient's wellbeing is at stake, as Jo found to her cost. In fact things might have become altogether too much for her, had it not been for the help of a certain charming house surgeon - and his motives for befriending her were anything but clear!