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Jake   Smith

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Jake Smith

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December 2013


Jake Smith is an author and magazine editor who lives in Traverse City, Michigan, with his wife, Vickie, their three children, and a Labrador retriever. A former assistant high school baseball coach and All-State shortstop, Jake now spends his time on the field helping coach his kids� youth baseball teams. Wish is Jake’s debut novel, and he hopes it will help support children’s hospitals, patient and family foundations, and participation in the National Marrow Donor Program.

One Year Ago

One year ago, after a mid-January, late-night discussion with my wife about my (lack of) fiction writing successes, I teetered somewhere between “am I just a glutton for punishment� and “maybe golf would be a saner hobby.� I used to golf a lot in high school. It’s not saner. And as for the punishment, my thick skin formed from previous rejections was finally starting to crack. Whatever salve I rub

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Published on January 31, 2014 14:28
Average rating: 4.24 · 728 ratings · 149 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
Wish

4.24 avg rating — 728 ratings — published 2014 — 8 editions
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“Sir, I think you’d better come with me,� the guard said, grabbing James by the elbow. James wrenched it free and demanded Aaron’s room number again. And again. And again. The guard shouted, the receptionist shouted, James shouted; the emergency room crowd took a sudden interest in the latest celebrity gossip in their magazines. “Hey!� A woman’s bark from down the hall pierced the commotion. “Whoever’s disturbing my peaceful environment of calm and healing is gonna get popped in the nose! And I just got a manicure! Now who’s causing all . . . ?� The short woman with a black beehive of hair and flushed cheeks matching her scrubs spotted James over the top of her thick, silver-rimmed glasses. Her lips pursed. “Listen, Deena,� James said, “I don’t know where you found this candy striper, but she won’t tell me where Aaron is. And I’m trying to explain to the nice big officer here that—� “Save it,� Deena said, cutting him off. Her cheeks faded to the same color white as her lab coat. “They’re back here.� She flicked her head down the hall and held up a hand to the guard. “He’s fine, Trevor; I got him.� “You sure?� The guard inflated, ready to pounce if the head ER nurse gave the order. “Yes, I’m sure. But I’ll call you if there’s a problem.� Deena raised one black eyebrow and scowled at James as he approached. “Won’t I, Mr. McConnell?� His plastic cleats left a trail of baseball field dirt for the guard to follow. He was in no mood for a reprimand. “Just tell me where he is.”
Jake Smith, Wish

“This guy barged in here and started yelling at me!� “I’m not—� James clenched his teeth behind a fake, faltering smile. “I’m not yelling,� he said to the guard. “I just want to find out where they took my son. He’s nine. With cancer. They rushed him in here about a half hour ago.� He turned back to the receptionist.”
Jake Smith, Wish




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