So what's wrong with a girl's wanting to be a veterinarian? Especially when she's Tracey Temple, who has been loving and caring for all kinds of animals since she was a little kid. Even now, a junior in high school, she really prefers animals to people, and her idea of excitement is being curled up with a good book on hoof-and-mouth disease.
Of course, the male D.V.M.'s want very much to exclude women from their ranks. That hasn't stopped Jane Baldwin, though. Dr. Baldwin is outstandingly successful, and to Tracey the opportunity to work a whole summer in her idol's hospital is sheer ecstasy.
Not unmixed ecstasy. Dr. Baldwin has a medical assistant, a young vet-to-be. Tracey is normally quite at home with boys -- in so many endearing ways they remind her of animals. But Whit is not exactly a boy. He's not even an ordinary man. He is the tallest, handsomest, most terrifying member of the adorable sex she has ever seen.
He is something less than impressed with the clumsy "puppy" whom he derisively calls a canine Florence Nightingale. Yet, for all his sarcasm, he is always ready to help, to teach, to console when the newcomer lets a valuable dog escape -- and to be basically glad, too, that she is the one chosen for the trip to the zoo to help set a lion's tail. In a word, Whit is all bark and no bite, although there's nothing fake about the chunk he takes out of Tracey's heart.
From Dr. Baldwin the intense, gamin-faced girl gains deeper insight into the profession she yearns to follow. Through the glory and the misery of loving Whit, who is not hers to love, Tracey's dream of a career turns into a fuller, richer dream of life. Here, even for girls who shudder at snakes, is a sparkling, romantic, completely intriguing novel about highly animate humans and humorously human animals. (from the inside flap)
Saturday Night by Marjorie Holmes (1959)
Carly is wearing a green Paisley skirt and an off-the-shoulder peasant blouse which she has bought with the first pay from her job at Deal's general store in the little Midwest town of Windy Lake. She is a junior in high school, but somehow her girl friends have outgrown her. She is timid adn feels left out of their fun, but she is terribly eager for life. Especially for whatever strange thrill may lie in wait for her during the hours of this magical Saturday night. "Something might turn up," she says when her mother asks her why she has changed to her new clothes. And, sure enough, something does, "turn up": Danny Keller discovers her.
Danny is the most popular boy in town, a Peter Pan who won't grow up, with faunlike ears and merry, carefree chatter. He takes her to the Copper Kettle, where the high school crowd hangs out, for grilled cheese and a Coke. Carly knows that the really popular girls have in turn all been his steady dates, but he sweeps her off her feet and she now becomes "his girl." As such, she finds that she has become popular ... she belongs. She feels, however, a strange misgiving in the welcome she receives from the others, and her forebodings prove to be all too well founded.
Much of the action of the story centers about the lake, beautiful, fascinating, but able to assume a dark and tragic aspect too, as Carly learns to her horror.
The reader who follows this typically American girl through the experiences of her first love will learn, as she learns, the truth of what her father says to her: "Hurt is simply a part of growing up. It's as inescapable as -- as cutting teeth." (from the inside flap)
Danny is the most popular boy in town, a Peter Pan who won't grow up, with faunlike ears and merry, carefree chatter. He takes her to the Copper Kettle, where the high school crowd hangs out, for grilled cheese and a Coke. Carly knows that the really popular girls have in turn all been his steady dates, but he sweeps her off her feet and she now becomes "his girl." As such, she finds that she has become popular ... she belongs. She feels, however, a strange misgiving in the welcome she receives from the others, and her forebodings prove to be all too well founded.
Much of the action of the story centers about the lake, beautiful, fascinating, but able to assume a dark and tragic aspect too, as Carly learns to her horror.
The reader who follows this typically American girl through the experiences of her first love will learn, as she learns, the truth of what her father says to her: "Hurt is simply a part of growing up. It's as inescapable as -- as cutting teeth." (from the inside flap)
Senior Trip by Marjorie Holmes (1962)
"Our treasurer reports that we have exactly one dollar and fifteen cents in the treasury. Despite this dismal fact, we voted unanimously to undertake a trip of eleven hundred miles to Washington, D.C., next spring."
What a wonderful, crazy idea! For Fran, president of the senior class, it meant headaches, hard work ... and romance! (from the back cover)
What a wonderful, crazy idea! For Fran, president of the senior class, it meant headaches, hard work ... and romance! (from the back cover)
Sorority Girl by Anne Emery (1952)
"I hereby pledge myself not to become part of any secret society at Sherwood High School." Signed, Jean Burnaby.
But the Nightingales were different -- a service auxiliary. So they said.
"Frankly, I think you'd better let it alone," said her mother.
"This is something every girl in school wants to be," Jean said, "every single girl! Do you realize they take only about twenty or twenty-five girls a year? And they're choosing me!"
Another story about the Burnaby family. (from the back cover)
But the Nightingales were different -- a service auxiliary. So they said.
"Frankly, I think you'd better let it alone," said her mother.
"This is something every girl in school wants to be," Jean said, "every single girl! Do you realize they take only about twenty or twenty-five girls a year? And they're choosing me!"
Another story about the Burnaby family. (from the back cover)
Senior Year by Anne Emery (1949)
"The most awful thing ..." exclaimed Sally tragically. At the very beginning of her senior year -- the year that was to be best of all -- her best friend goes off to another school. Dependable Scotty starts dating someone else. Sally finds herself a party fifth wheel. Everything goes wrong, until Sally begins to discover -- Sally. (from the back cover)
Scarlet Royal by Anne Emery (1952)
The only thing in Margo's life that really counted was the horses themselves: riding them, hunting, showing, caring for them, loving them. Especially her own horse, Scarlet Royal -- hers until the wealthy Cranshaws offered more than the struggling Macintyre's could afford to refuse. Be nice to the Cranshaws, her mother said. How could she like Ginevra Cranshaw, who went off with her beloved horse and her best boy friend?
A story of sportsmanship and courage by the author of Senior Year. (from the back cover)
A story of sportsmanship and courage by the author of Senior Year. (from the back cover)
High Note, Low Note by Anne Emery (1954)
Senior year -- the year of College Boards, of college plans, of scholarship applications. Jean's last chance to improve her grades, to win recognition at Sherwood High School. The last year to be with her friends -- especially Jeff, and Kim, and Scotty. No wonder Jean has trouble keeping her mind on the music scholarship and all her fine beginning-of-the-school-year plans.
Another delightful story about the Burnaby family. (from the back cover)
Another delightful story about the Burnaby family. (from the back cover)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)