A subtle, simple story, Jake strikes me as a particularly good choice, among the many available options, for reading during the Christmas season. Not only is the story thematically oriented toward Christmas, but the sense of pure hope that lingers within the pages is a great lead-in to the special feeling of Christmas Day. I can easily imagine families reading a chapter or two of this book together each day as December twenty-fifth approaches, finishing on Christmas Eve as the anticipation of the special day reaches its zenith. It's no surprise that an author as inspiring as Audrey Couloumbis would be the one to have written a book so perfectly matched to the joys of the holiday season.
Jake doesn't start out in all happiness, though. Right near the beginning, as Jake and his mother are leaving the grocery store together one day, calamity strikes when Jake's mother has a bad fall in the icy, slippery parking lot. The injury is a very serious one; serious enough, in fact, to necessitate that Jake's granddad on his father's side travel in from out of town to help with the situation. Jake's father died when his son was but a toddler, and since then his granddad has kept a safe distance from mother and son, his involvement in Jake's life going no deeper than a few scattered phone calls each year and an exchange of gifts through the post every Christmas. This year, the incapacitating injury to Jake's mother will force his granddad to take a more active role in the family, a reality that discomfits Jake nearly as much as does the harm that has befallen his mother.
It's a relief, then, that Jake and his mother have a few caring friends around the area who will help their family get through these hard times. As Jake cautiously comes to know his granddad, it is the presence of the friends he knows well, especially Mrs. Buttermark from next door, which helps bolster his spirits and give him a sense of familiarity as he struggles to adjust to the differences that have marked this Christmas season. Jake just may find out that even when he gets back everything he was most afraid of losing, his life is a lot better than it had been because of the wonderful new things he has gained. Who could have predicted that a nasty fall in a parking lot would lead to such blessing? I guess that bad situations really can turn into good ones, and it is this message that Jake delivers so effectively, with much personal warmth and sincere Christmas cheer.
Jake is the type of boy that endears himself to the heart of anyone who ever meets him (or in this case, reads about him), which makes him a perfectly easy character to sympathize with as one reads this book and absorbs what is truly being said in the story. I think of all the novels I've read in which people have lost their loved ones without ever getting to know them, and then I see Jake's granddad coming onto the scene here and understand the beauty of the gift that Jake is being given. Not everyone gets to begin a relationship anew after years of separation, but here is Jake's grandad, alive and healthy and here with Jake for as long as he can be. Here can be such a lovely word. Not everyone is lucky enough to have here, but Jake and his grandad have it for now, and there's nothing finer than that. What I think Jake does best of all is the way it lets us feel how much of a gift our relationships are for as long as we still have them, and encourages us to be proactive in maintaining those relationships even when it's not convenient.
Jake is a very nice story, in my opinion, and I think that the simple title fits the book perfectly. After all, it is through the openness and goodness of Jake's spirit that the narrative finds its meaning, so the eponymous title seems completely appropriate. All in all, I would probably give two and a half stars to Jake, along with my happy recommendation as a Christmas story to be treasured.