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Ripple Effect

K.C. Foster Author Interview

Heather’s Journey follows a 19-year-old girl living in a small town in Illinois during the 1930s who dreams of leaving, but tragedy strikes, changing everything about the course of her life. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The year 1930 amazes me. For most of the year, everyone thought the stock market crash would breeze over and they could keep dancing like they did in the Roaring Twenties. They were so vulnerable, and our early Americans have grabbed my heart. Along with this, there was Prohibition, and racism that was considered normal. They were still recovering from World War I and the Titanic sinking. (Similarly, we’re still recovering from 9/11, which was over 20 years ago. Healing takes time.) Heather was a mirror of her father’s dreams in his younger days. He moved north; she wants to go south where the dreams started, but racism, like I said, was normal. I pondered on how unfair that had to have been for a young woman with enough issues to deal with. Racism had such a ripple effect on Heather’s entire life. It really umbrellaed her whole “journey.”

Were you able to achieve everything you wanted with the characters in the novel?

I took 18 months to write the novel. I fell in love with all my characters. I even have some compassion for Sylvia. It took time to develop her character. I withheld good qualities from her. I also discovered a struggle in creating Mae — a comical character who isn’t too annoying. Renato’s character was fun — I built him from younger photos of Marc Anthony. I picture Heather to look like Dorothy Danridge in her younger years. Hugh is a soft version of Denzel Washington. 🙂 I have gazed over the marsh in Savannah and thought, this is what the end of a happy story looks like. And so, . . . So, yes, I achieved everything I wanted to.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

One important theme is conflict with independence and family — when are we being selfish, and how much of ourselves should we feel guilty about if we don’t give away? Sylvia suffered this conflict. So did Heather and Mae. Renato keeps the reader in conflict with this. He held back going to his family who could keep him safe to take care of Heather and Mae.

Chasing a dream that seems impossible is another theme. Must we have the skills and resources to walk towards where we want to be in life? Renato had a rough past, but he dreamed of respect.

The power of the ripple effect of racism is embedded before page 1.

What is the next book that you are working on and when can your fans expect it to be out?

I am working on another book set in 1930. The setting is a Chicago hotel. Once again, the protagonist is an unadmirable character in the American eye — an Irishman named Percival Dooley. I am hoping to be done with the story by the end of June of this year.

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Website | Amazon

In the heart of the Great Depression, one young woman dares to dream beyond her circumstances.

Nineteen-year-old Heather Randolph longs to escape her small-town life in Sterling, Illinois, and uncover her family’s roots in Savannah, Georgia. But when tragedy strikes, she’s thrust into a world of danger, deception, and forbidden romance.

Caught between a charming Puerto Rican bootlegger, her sharp-tongued 12-year-old sister, and a mother whose cruelty knows no bounds, Heather must navigate the turbulent era of Prohibition, the shadows of World War I, and the harsh realities of racism and lawlessness. With the law closing in and her dreams slipping away, will she find the freedom she craves—or be trapped by the past she’s desperate to escape?

A gripping historical fiction novel set in 1930s America, perfect for fans of sweeping family sagas, unforgettable heroines, and forbidden love.