Description
"... Langston wisely limits the power of wishes, so there can be no easy fixes to complex problems. Lacey cannot simply wish away her debt or her mother's trauma. This allows the story to remain grounded in the everyday struggles and relationships of Lacey, her friends, and her family. It is all the better for it, putting the focus on the compelling and sympathetic characters." - School Library Journal Elizabeth Langston lives in North Carolina, halfway between the beaches and the mountains. She has two twenty-something daughters, one old husband, and too many computers to count. When she's not writing software or stories, Elizabeth loves to travel with her family, watch dance reality shows on TV, and dream about which restaurant should get her business that night. Elizabeth writes YA fiction with a supernatural twist. I Wish is the first book in her I WISH trilogy.xa0 Elizabeth also has a YA time travel romance trilogy, Whisper Falls .Writing as Julia Day, Elizabeth's first YA contemporary romance, The Possibility of Somewhere , will release in Sept 2016.
Features & Highlights
- What she needs is a miracle. What she gets is a genie with rules.
- Lacey Linden has gotten good at hiding the truth of her life--a depressed mom, a crumbling house, and bills too big to pay. In school, she's a girl with a ready smile and good grades, but at night, Lacey spends her time dreaming up ways to save her family. On a get-cash-quick trip to the flea market, she 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 conventional wishes, he's one assignment away from promotion to a new job with more challenging cases. His month with Lacey is exactly what he expects and nothing like he imagines. Lacey and Grant soon discover that the hardest task of all might be saying goodbye.





