Who is JWC and how was the One Last Wish Foundation created? Discover the tragic story behind a struggle for survival against impossible odds. Follow the interwining story of true love and friendships that compelled JWC to dedicate a life and legacy to helping others in this extraordinary novel of hope.
You don't know me, but I know about you.... I can't make you live longer, I can't stop you from hurting. But I can give you one wish, as someone did for me....
Lurlene McDaniel (born c. 1948) is an author who has written over 50 young adult books. She is well known for writing about characters struggling with chronic and terminal illnesses, such as cancer, diabetes, and organ failure.
even though I'm older and these books are made for younger people I read it when I was younger but I wanted to reread it again as an older person to see if I still felt the same way. and I do. I feel that the author of these books teach us a lesson on love life and loss. when I read these books I wish the day would never end. they're just so good they're hard to put down. I highly recommend this book even if you're young or old. this book takes me back to my childhood when I read it the first time
I thought this was a great story. Once I got started it was hard to put down. I loved the characters of plot of the story. I have read all of the One Last Wish novels, but never this one. I thought Jenny was such a great main character. She was a sixteen year old girl who was trying to have an amazing summer with her best friend Richard when she was told she had cancer. It was a heartwarming and heartbreaking journey for Jenny, the inspiration for Jenny house and the secret friend for all sick children.
After all these years I finally figured out who JWC is :)
The One Last Wish series tells the stories of teens with various chronic/terminal health conditions. Each of them receive a mysterious letter and check from someone who understands their situation. A check to fulfill a wish of theirs accompanies each letter which is signed by someone named JWC. This book explains the backstory of JWC and the One Last Wish program.
JWC turns out to be a girl named Jenny who is being raised by her wealthy grandmother. Jenny is looking forward to spending the summer with her friend Richard Holloway until she receives the news that she has been diagnosed with cancer. This being the 1970s, there are limited treatment options available to Jenny. After she realizes that her health is dwindling away, Jenny considers what she wants her legacy to be in order to help other teens like her.
I read the One Last Wish series a bit out of order growing up because I would read the books as I found them at various libraries or thrift stores. This one did a great job at revealing the backstory of the series. The story also stands out with its setting in the past and detailing how different (as well as minimal) treatments that were available to cancer patients.
A lot of Lurlene McDaniels books are about romance and kids with illness… but this time the romance wasn’t the central point of the book it was on the realness of cancer and what it really is like especially for kids. What it does to the people around them and what they are feeling as well. This book was so much more real but was also so heartwarming with the friendships and relationships. The legacy left at the end of this book that would carry into more of her books is so heartwarming and a reminder that good things can come from heartbreak and what we think unfairness.
I read this book as a preteen and decided to reread as an adult. I just finished it and am crying as if it’s the first time I’ve read it. The characters she creates are so real they step off the pages and invite you to feel their suffering and their joy. This is a great book/series to teach empathy to young children.
The book "The Legacy" by Lurlene McDaniel is a book about a young girl named Jenny who is diagnosed with leukemia at the age of 16. Jenny Was a healthy girl who was care free and was so excited for the up coming summer. One of her best friends named Richard was coming up to visit and she was so excited. Right when Richard came to town Jenny Meet him and was eager to go off and make many summer plans. But when she suddenly gets sick there whole summer gets changed. In my opinion this is one of the best books i have read in a long time. The author Lurlene McDaniel is also one of my favorite authors. I love all of her books but this would have to be the best. I think it is one of my favorites because both Jenny and Richard have a secret crush on each other and neither of them have the courage to tell each other. My favorite characters would have to be Jenny and Richard. I just thought it was so cute how they both secretly liked each other and neither new it. At one point in the story Jenny would not let anyone see her or visit her in the hospital because of the effects of her chemo therapy on her. She was really worried about how she looked and thought that Richard would think of her differently. Which was completely untrue. Richard was really upset when he heard that Jenny did not want to see her. So finally Richard started righting her letters and she wrote back. Even though this wasn't seeing Jenny, Richard took what he could get when it came to being in contact with Jenny. My favorite part of the book was at the beginning before Jenny got sick. One night, when Richard had first arrived, Jenny's grandmother and Richards parents had planned a dinner that Jenny and Richard were both invited to. At this dinner is when Jenny really started to feel sick. She thought that she was just coming down with the flue but once she had gone to the dinner party she started to feel worse. When Richard asked Jenny to dance at the dinner party. She had started to feel light headed and she asked they could go outside to get some fresh air. At this point in the story Richard wants to tell Jenny how he feels but when he was going to talk to her about Jenny had passed out and had to go straight to the hospital. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone that is interested in reading. Every one would love it!
I wish Ames of somewhere between ya lit and death was still updating her blog, cause I'd love to see her take on this one.
I didn't read Lurlene when I was a kid. My childhood and teen years were full of Babysitter's Club, Sweet Valley and various kid and adult classics. So this was in essence my very first Lurlene book, and...it wasn't horrible.
It was cliche as hell, of course. Jenny's the kind of beautiful cancer patient Hazel Grace Lancaster was created to be the antithesis of, not that this makes her a bad character. She was okay, and I did enjoy her friendships with the other girls in the cancer ward. But her story was basically this:
Jenny: I'm rich and pretty but I don't want the life my grandmother wants for me. Grandmother: Jenny, you shall have a fine prince and live the life I've mapped out for you. Richard: I'm handsome and I love a girl who's too good for me. Jenny: *collapses* Doctor: It's the cancer. Jenny: *WOE* Grandmother: She'll have a private room with lots of luxuries. Jenny: I want to stay with the other girls! Grandmother: No, you're too rich for that. ...oh, fine. Richard: I love her! Grandmother: BACK, BACK I SAY! Jenny: But I love him! Grandmother: Welp, she's dying. Fine, Richard, you can spend her last days with her.
Still, I've read far worse. Marian wasn't the stereotypical controlling rich bitch, she honestly did love Jenny and Jenny loved her even though she was frustrated by her. And while I didn't ship Richard and Jenny like burning, they were pretty sweet together and I'm glad they had a chance to confess their feelings while Jenny was still in decent enough shape.
And...I admit it, the ending was pretty sad. Genuine sad, not weepy maudlin crap.
And damn, Ames was right about the medical fetishism in these books. I knew it was coming but I cringed anyway, I tend to be a wuss about that sort of thing.
Overall...it was okay. Not horrible, not too stupid, but not something I'd buy for myself and read again.
Re-read. I originally rated this 3 stars and I think I'll keep it at a 3.5. This is a series I'd devoured as a pre-teen! From the pulp fiction era where "sick kids" was trendy...One Last Wish is a series of teens facing fatal illness of varying degrees. The Legacy serves as a prequel to the series about Miss Jenny Crawford, who just turned 16 and has been diagnosed with leukemia. Jenny realizes her life is forever changed...her hair is falling out and she has a moon face and she can't bear to have Richard, the childhood friend and love of her life, see her like this. However, the pediatric ward lends her friends in Noreen, Eileen, and Kimbra. The Four Musketeers use black humor and a bond in sickness to grow close. But reality hits when they slowly start dying off. And oof...the ending came quick. The story takes place in the late 70's and it appears cancer/radiation has come quite away since then so Jenny's illness comes and goes a little awkwardly for narrative sake. Despite knowing the ending I still shed quite a few tears when Jenny met her inevitable fate. Jenny uses her trust fund to set up the One Last Wish Foundation, donating $100,000 to sick teens around the U.S and her grandmother sets up Jenny House, leaving it to Richard to run as a safe haven for the children. Beautiful story of a strong girl and her legacy!
- There wasn't any one specific thing that I didn't like about this book. However, I think it could have been fleshed out more. I got this "Special Edition" vibe which makes sense since it discloses who JWC is and why the foundation was founded. So I would think it could be a little longer.
- This one definitely had a lot more to it. More characters and more back story. - I really enjoyed the side characters: Noreen, Kimbra, and Elaine. They were great additions, especially since most the books in this series focus on one person. - I think it's great that Jenny is willing to do something to help other people like her. Reading about the people who'd gotten her checks before helped a lot because it made the impact of what she's doing a lot bigger. - Can't wait to read about what happens at Jenny House. I think I'll like those more that just people getting the checks, though that's still great.
Eh. It was okay. I don't do so well with books about illness and dying right now so I stayed pretty far detached from the story. Jenny's battle with leukemia and her grandmother's struggle with losing yet another family member should have been more moving to me than it was, I suspect, especially with the love story of Richard mixed in there. I feel McDaniel probably did her research as far as some of the feelings kids have when they are faced with these kinds of diseases, but it felt a little gratuitous for me. Emotional just for the sake of being emotional. Perhaps it was the awesome 80s cover of the book that turned me off, or the untouchable wealth of Jenny's grandmother, or maybe it just felt way too predictable for me. However, this might be a good book for young adults to read in order to open their minds to these sorts of issues. I'm sure these books have a place. I just don't think it's in my house.
The Legacy: Making Wishes Come True Romance/Drama/Illness Jenny and Richard are in love, despite their four year age difference. Richard comes home from Princeton for summer break and Jenny, sixteen, is trying to conceal her feelings for Richard, and conceal her failing health. Naturally, she is dying of leukemia - can't you tell from the cover? Jenny fights for her life for two years, goes into remission once, but can't seem to shake the disease. Finally, when it's obvious that there is no recovery for Jenny, Richard takes her sailing - one.last.time. Of course they confess their love for each other. Of course Jenny dies just as the year 1980 dawns and while everyone is cheering in Times Square, Richard and Jenny's grandmother are watching Jenny take her last breath.
This book is predictable and cheesy. If I could give it half of a star, I would.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This was my favorite book of the series so far. We finally learned who JWC is and how the One Last Wish foundation came to be.
I loved Jenny & it broke my heart to watch her suffer and succumb to her leukemia. I loved the romance aspect of this story. It was realistic and believable with just the right amount of angst. I also liked Jenny realizing the strength of good friendships and people who can empathize with you when you're going through something bad (or good). I absolutely love Jenny's last wish and was pleasantly surprised about Jenny's grandmother's last wish. I'm so excited to read the next books about kids going to Jenny House where I'm sure they will learn the importance of friendships like Jenny did in the hospital.
I really loved Lurlene McDaniel books when I was in Jr. high, and this one was my favorite. When I was a child a couple people in my family were sick and died. McDaniel's books were like therapy for me, they helped to understand and to cope, they made me realize I wasn't the only one who lost someone. These aren't the best in terms of writing but they are short and serve their purpose. I believe I read that the author started writing this series when her son was diagnosed with diabetes and she wanted to help others in similar situations. Over all a enjoyable and quick read.
Made me cry and very emotional. I still remember this story form my childhood days. She is a rich heiress and the last of her name. Even though they never really dated, the guy never marries because of her.This book made such an impression on me back when I was ten that I continued reading her books for years!
This is the story of who the person who gave the sick children money and the chances to live their dreams. Her name is Jenny and she was battling leukemia, and there was also a little bit of romance with a certain somebody. Like the other books from Lurlene McDaniel, this was very heartwarming.
Finally we find out the story behind One Last Wish And JWC. This story has a little bit of everything in it. But ultimately sadness. This one is a real tear jerker.
it was like super beautiful and i read it over the summer i just wanna reread it. it is the only book i could read over again and not get bored its so awesome goodjob Mrs Mcdaniel:) :)