What Lacey needs is a miracle. What she gets is a genie with rules.
Lacey Linden is hiding the truth of her life—a depressed mom, a crumbling house, and bills too big to pay. While her high school classmates see a girl with a ready smile and good grades, Lacey spends her evenings seeking ways to save her family. On a get-cash-quick trip to the flea market, Lacey stumbles over a music box that seemingly begs her to take it home. She does, only to find it is inhabited by a gorgeous “genie.” He offers her a month of wishes, one per day, but there’s a catch. Each wish must be humanly possible.
Grant belongs to a league of supernatural beings, dedicated to serving humans in need. After two years of fulfilling the boring wishes of conventional teens, he is one assignment away from promotion to a challenging new role with more daring cases. Yet his month with Lacey is everything that he expects and nothing like he imagines. Lacey and Grant soon discover that the most difficult task of all might be saying goodbye.
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Praise for I Wish
From School Library Journal (I Wish #1)
Langston wisely limits the power of wishes, so there can be no easy fixes to complex problems. [The story] is all the better for it, putting the focus on the compelling and sympathetic characters.
… the denouement offers enough twists and unresolved questions to have readers wishing the next book was already available.
From K-books blog:
I Wish is a fantastic storyline, with a dash of romance that is perfect for any YA fan. I can’t recommend it enough.
From Reese’s Reviews blog:
This is definitely one of the most beautiful and amazingly written books I’ve ever read. Elizabeth Langston has written a fantastic story that drew me in from the first page.
Wishing for You by Elizabeth Langston
She’s a girl who can’t remember. He’s the guy she can’t forget…
It’s her final semester of high school, and Kimberley Rey is curious to discover what will come next. She needs to pick a college, but her memory disability complicates the choice. Will her struggles to remember make it impossible to leave home?
Help arrives through an unexpected and supernatural gift. Grant is a “genie” with rules. He can give her thirty wishes (one per day for a month) as long as the tasks are humanly possible. Kimberley knows just what to ask for–lessons in how to live on her own.
But her wishes change when a friend receives a devastating diagnosis. As she joins forces with Grant to help her friend, Kimberley learns that the ability to live in the moment–to forget–may be more valuable than she ever knew.
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Excerpt from Wishing For You
There was a pounding on the bedroom door. My eyes fluttered open to find sunlight streaming into the attic.
Lacey groaned. “What is it, Henry?”
The door creaked and then banged against the wall. “Did Kimberley sleep over?”
“Does it look like she’s in this room?”
“Yes.”
“Then she did sleep over.”
“Cool.” Lacey’s younger brother ran over to my side of the bed and plopped cross-legged on the floor. “Do you want breakfast?”
I turned my head toward him, trying to focus. “Yes, I do.”
“Mom is making pancakes. Do you like them?”
“Yes, I do.”
“Bacon?”
“One of my favorites.” I could smell it in the air.
“Good. It’s one of mine too. Will you be ready to eat soon?”
I clapped a hand over my mouth to keep from snorting. Lacey had the most adorable little brother ever. “Is your mom making you wait until we come down?”
“Yes, she is.”
“Give us ten minutes to get dressed.”
“Ten? That sounds like a lot.”
“Seven, then,” I said in a firm voice.
He rose and ran from the room.
Beside me, Lacey laughed. “You handled that very well.”
“How do you keep from laughing every time you talk to him?”
“Practice.”
We were ready in six minutes and were about to head down the stairs when Lacey caught my arm. “Do you know where Sean went for Christmas?”
“I don’t think so.” I grabbed my phone and opened my notes. “What made you think of that?”
“It’s been puzzling me. Mrs. Tucker and Sara kept their consignment shop open until Christmas Eve. Did his father go with him?”
“Yes.” Lacey was right. It had felt strange when Sean mentioned it. But if I’d asked other questions, he hadn’t answered because my notes only had the one detail. “Maybe he was visiting colleges.”
“Someone like Sean would already have that decision made. Has he said where he’s applying?”
I shook my head helplessly. It seemed like the kind of information a friend should know, but nothing was emerging from the recesses of my brain.
“Hey, guys,” Henry called up the stairs. “It’s been seven minutes.”
Lacey called back, “On our way, little man.”
We smiled at each other. There were pancakes waiting. We’d have to solve the Sean puzzle later.
Elizabeth Langston lives in North Carolina, halfway between the beaches and the mountains. She has two college-age daughters and one old husband. When she’s not writing software or stories, Elizabeth loves to travel with her family, watch shows on dance or Sherlock Holmes, and dream about which restaurant ought to get her business that night.
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