Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Wish

Wish
Wish
Author: Jake Smith
ISBN-13: 9781414391540
ISBN-10: 1414391544
Publication Date: 5/1/2014
Pages: 311
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 3

4.2 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

sophiesperspective avatar reviewed Wish on + 141 more book reviews
I wasn't sure I'd enjoy this book ... didn't really seem to be "my thing". I was surprised at how easily the story went by, and it promotes a worthy cause without being cliche or groan-inducing. It's a good read, and well written. Recommend.
PianoLady357 avatar reviewed Wish on + 157 more book reviews
I have been drawn to Wish from the time I first saw its cover several months ago, and while it is an entertaining work of fiction, it is so much more. It's a story of family, of caring and sacrifice, of people coming together to help in time of great need. It's very real, poignant, touching, heartwarming, and motivational. The cover makes you think this is about baseball, but it's really a story about the long journey of one special family, set against the backdrop of the professional baseball world.

At the heart of the story is nine-year-old Aaron, who is beginning treatment after his cancer has relapsed - and anyone who has loved, taken care of, and sacrificed for a child diagnosed with a serious illness can relate to Aaron and his parents. The outcome is not guaranteed, worries are real, emotions are raw, yet Wish is an inspiring book filled with hope and triumph.

Jake is a talented writer and has done his research well. In fact, I find it hard to believe that he has not experienced what he writes about, at least in some form. His description of the hospital where Aaron receives treatment, a state-of-the-art children's hospital and research center in Michigan, is fascinating.

James, Aaron's dad, clings to his faith, but still finds himself drawn into the dark world of The Place . . .

The Place was a cell. A prison echoing one powerful, spiteful word: why? . . . When James couldn't fight the situation with stubbornness, he wallowed in The Place. The Place where pictures of life without his son filled the walls. The Place where he sat in the corner wondering what he could've done differently. The Place where he grew old staring out a smudged window, imagining who his little boy would have become had his life not been stolen.

None of us can say how we would handle a similar situation without having experienced it, but if my child were critically ill, I can totally see myself wallowing in The Place.

How Aaron's "wish" to see his dad play in a professional baseball game comes about is highly entertaining - from the inner workings of baseball clubs, to the humble pro athlete who quietly uses his "celebrity" to help sick children, to the awesome night game itself. This whole book is a reminder that God heals - sometimes in life and sometimes on the other side - but He heals. Sometimes miraculously, but often through the skilled hands of the medical professionals, and sometimes simply through the willingness of ordinary people to be used.

I think the phrase "fiction with a mission" perfectly describes Wish, for there is a bigger purpose behind this book. Jake writes in the acknowledgements at the end that the story's real mission is "the care of those in hospitals right now and those who anxiously wait to receive word that there's a bone marrow match and a donor ready to give."

So for me, Wish is Christian fiction that entertains and engages the emotions, while inspiring readers to some kind of action at the same time. These words of Aaron's parents point the way for all of us: "We can sit on the sidelines and let this cancer tell us how to act - or we can move forward with life and living."

I am so glad the people at Tyndale believed in Jake's book and hope we see more from him soon. This is a story that sports fans will obviously enjoy, but I believe it will appeal to all readers, as I loved it even though I don't care much for professional sports. Wish is a great debut for Jake Smith. Highly recommended.

Thank you to Tyndale House for providing an electronic copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
virginiajeanne avatar reviewed Wish on + 207 more book reviews
Jake's young son has cancer, and the boy's wish is to see his father play one baseball game for a Major League team. Former college ballplayer Jake agrees, then has to work hard to fulfill his son's wish. I thought this book was interesting, and a good story about children with cancer and what families go through.