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Books with title Don't Say No to Flo: The Story of Florence Nightingale

  • The Lady with the Lamp: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Lee Wyndham, Mort Kunstler

    Paperback (Scholastic Book Services, March 15, 1970)
    None
  • The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Margaret Leighton, Corrine Boyd Dillon

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, March 15, 1952)
    1952 Grosset & Dunlap; Book Club Hardcover w/Dust Jacket
  • Heart and Soul: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Gena K. Gorrell

    Paperback (Tundra Books, March 8, 2005)
    In Florence Nightingale’s day, if a person was sick – and lucky – he or she was nursed at home with caring family members tending the bedside. Hospitals were horrible places from which few emerged alive. The nurses were often drunks and prostitutes. Doctors had rudimentary skills.Thus the privileged Nightingale family was appalled when Florence, who had done her share of household nursing, announced that she wanted to train to work in a hospital. After all, her role was cut out for her: she was to be a decorative, witty lady. A career, much less nursing, was out of the question.It took many years, but Florence found her calling in Crimea. More English soldiers died of sickness there than died in battle. If they were wounded they were almost sure to suffer in misery, lying on pallets caked with old blood, hungry and thirsty, without anyone to offer them so much as a sip of water. Florence caused a revolution in her insistence for cleanliness, wholesome food, and kind treatment of men, who were considered to be nothing more than cannon fodder.Florence’s campaign resulted in reforms to health care for millions of people. Although she was in frail health for much of her life, her sense of outrage and her extraordinary stamina in the face of prejudice and almost criminal ignorance make her story one of the most inspiring in history.Dozens of photographs, posters, and cartoons bring the past to life in this memorable biography.
    X
  • The Value of Compassion: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Ann Donegan Johnson

    Hardcover (Value Communications, July 1, 1987)
    The story of the English girl who became a famous nurse, emphasizing the role of compassion in her dedication to the alleviation of suffering.
  • Don't Say No to Flo: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Stewart Ross, Sue Shield

    Paperback (Wayland Pub Ltd, Oct. 1, 2003)
    None
    O
  • Heart and Soul: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Gena K. Gorrell

    eBook (Tundra Books, Jan. 29, 2013)
    In Florence Nightingale’s day, if a person was sick – and lucky – he or she was nursed at home with caring family members tending the bedside. Hospitals were horrible places from which few emerged alive. The nurses were often drunks and prostitutes. Doctors had rudimentary skills.Thus the privileged Nightingale family was appalled when Florence, who had done her share of household nursing, announced that she wanted to train to work in a hospital. After all, her role was cut out for her: she was to be a decorative, witty lady. A career, much less nursing, was out of the question.It took many years, but Florence found her calling in Crimea. More English soldiers died of sickness there than died in battle. If they were wounded they were almost sure to suffer in misery, lying on pallets caked with old blood, hungry and thirsty, without anyone to offer them so much as a sip of water. Florence caused a revolution in her insistence for cleanliness, wholesome food, and kind treatment of men, who were considered to be nothing more than cannon fodder.Florence’s campaign resulted in reforms to health care for millions of people. Although she was in frail health for much of her life, her sense of outrage and her extraordinary stamina in the face of prejudice and almost criminal ignorance make her story one of the most inspiring in history.Dozens of photographs, posters, and cartoons bring the past to life in this memorable biography.
  • Heart and Soul: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Gena K. Gorrell

    Hardcover (Tundra Books, Sept. 1, 2000)
    In Florence Nightingale’s day, if a person was sick – and lucky – he or she was nursed at home with caring family members tending the bedside. Hospitals were horrible places from which few emerged alive. The nurses were often drunks and prostitutes. Doctors had rudimentary skills.Thus the privileged Nightingale family was appalled when Florence, who had done her share of household nursing, announced that she wanted to train to work in a hospital. After all, her role was cut out for her: she was to be a decorative, witty lady. A career, much less nursing, was out of the question.It took many years, but Florence found her calling in Crimea. More English soldiers died of sickness there than died in battle. If they were wounded they were almost sure to suffer in misery, lying on pallets caked with old blood, hungry and thirsty, without anyone to offer them so much as a sip of water. Florence caused a revolution in her insistence for cleanliness, wholesome food, and kind treatment of men, who were considered to be nothing more than cannon fodder.Florence’s campaign resulted in reforms to health care for millions of people. Although she was in frail health for much of her life, her sense of outrage and her extraordinary stamina in the face of prejudice and almost criminal ignorance make her story one of the most inspiring in history.Dozens of photographs, posters, and cartoons bring the past to life in this memorable biography.
    X
  • The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Margaret Leighton

    Mass Market Paperback (Tempo Books, March 15, 1964)
    The Story of Florence Nightingale
  • Faithful Friend: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Beatrice Siegel

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Feb. 1, 1991)
    Traces the life of the mother of modern nursing, describes what medicine was like in the early 1800s, and recounts how Florence Nightingale improved the medical care of soldiers during the Crimean War
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  • The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Margaret Leighton, Corrine Boyd Dillon

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, March 15, 1952)
    Biography of Florence Nightingale nurse 1820-1910.
  • Heart and Soul: The Story of Florence Nightingale

    Gena K. Gorrell

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-05-09, May 9, 2008)
    None
  • The story of Florence Nightingale

    Inez N McFee

    Unknown Binding (Hall & McCreary, March 15, 1912)
    None