Nursing History Review , an annual peer-reviewed publication of the American Association for the History of Nursing, is a showcase for the most significant current research on nursing history. Regular sections include scholarly articles, over a dozen book reviews of the best publications on nursing and health care history that have appeared in the past year, and a section abstracting new doctoral dissertations on nursing history. Historians, researchers, and individuals fascinated with the rich field of nursing will find this an important resource. Included in Volume 28:: Service is the Rent We Pay:: The Complexity of Nurses' Claims to Their Place in Social Justice Movements The American Red Cross Mercy Ship in the First World War:: A Pivotal Experiment in Nursing-Centered Clinical Humanitarianism The Nurses No-One Remembers:: Looking for Spanish Nurses in Accounts of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) The Norwegian Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (NORMASH) in the Korean War (1951–1954):: Military Hospital or Humanitarian Sanctuary? Matriarchs of the Operating Room:: Nurses, Neurosurgery, and Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1920–1940