Today, June Foster joins us. She shares the story behind her new release, A Hometown Fourth of July.
My book, A Hometown Fourth of July, released July 1, 2012 with Desert Breeze Publishing, but the summer months are always a good time to talk about it. The story has a July 4th theme and is a romance between a young Hispanic man and the beautiful woman he leads to a relationship with God. In the story, the hero searches for his true identity believing if he finds his birth family, he’ll be a whole person. But I’ll let you read the story to find out what happens. Though the story is fictitious, the premise is based on a my husband’s brother. Here’s the story – the real one, that is.
My husband loves to tell a story about his parents when they were childless. His mom and dad were of the Catholic faith, so after they’d been married for eight years with no babies on the way, they decided adoption would be a good route to begin expanding their family. They paid a visit to the Catholic Charities in Birmingham, Alabama. There they found a darling, four year old boy named Marshall and brought him home to be a part of their family.
For reasons known only to God, after two more years, Mrs. Foster found she was pregnant and delivered her first biological son, Mike. After that came my husband Joe, then Pat, then Helen, and finally Steve. Marshall was thrilled with so many brothers and a sister.
The story goes that Mrs. Foster decided that the two older boys, Mike and Joe, needed to learn that their oldest brother was adopted. She called a formal family meeting and made the solemn announcement about how Marshall came to their family. At the end of the meeting, Joe questioned his mother, “Marshall still gets to be our big brother, doesn’t he?”
Even though my husband left for the army after he grew up, he and Marshall remained in touch. When we moved to Lacey, Washington where he lived, Marshall mentioned to Joe he’d be interested in finding his birth family but had no idea how to go about it. Since Joe had a good knowledge of the computer, he offered to help. Alabama, which had been a closed adoption state, opened their records up in the early 2000’s, and Joe was able to find out some information.
Marshall was sorry to hear his birthmother had passed away ten years before but was encouraged to learn he had a sister. Joe couldn’t find a contact number for Marshall’s sister, but located a number for Marshall’s niece, his sister’s daughter. Marshall was too ill-at-ease to make the call so Joe dialed the number while Marshall looked on clasping his hands tightly in front of him.
When a woman’s voice said hello, Joe said he was phoning on behalf of his brother, Marshall Foster, and that Marshall was looking for his sister. Joe asked if he had the right number. My husband thought the woman had hung up as he heard nothing but silence, then a sob carried over the phone. Finally, the woman said she believed he had the correct number. She was Marshall’s niece and said her mother, Marshall’s sister, had been looking for him for years, always hoping to meet her brother. Joe asked if the mother lived in the same town, and again, the niece let out a sob. She said her mother had died two months before. Marshall was devastated, but his niece’s promise to come to Washington to visit him with her other sister the following July, cheered him, and they made plans. But in June, just two days after Marshall’s birthday, he died of cancer, never getting to meet even his nieces.
This sounds like a sad story, but wait. There’s more. During the process of helping Marshall to find his birth family, my husband and I had occasion to tell Marshall about our awesome and powerful God who sent his son Jesus to the earth to die for our sins. We shared how to have faith in the Savior and about our final home – Heaven. Marshall began going to church with us and gave his life to the Lord at Thanksgiving that year before the following summer. He started coming to Bible study in our home. We were warmed when he told us how he’d always felt empty. He pointed to his heart. He said he was no longer empty inside, and he finally knew who his real Father was.
Joe and I were present on that day in the middle of June when Marshall went to be with the Lord. I’ve never witnessed anyone die before, but I can say, truly, without hesitation, that the experience was beautiful. And I know that someday we’ll see this wonderful man again when we join him in Heaven to be with Jesus forever.
Thank you, June, for sharing such a touching, personal story.
An award-winning author, June Foster is also a retired teacher with a BA in Education and a MA in counseling. She is the mother of two and grandmother of ten. June began writing Christian romance in 2010. She penned her first novel on her Toshiba laptop as she and her husband traveled the US in their RV. Her adventures provided a rich source of information for her novels. In 2013, June’s book Give Us This Day was a finalist in EPIC’s eBook awards and in 2014 a finalist in the National Readers Choice Awards for best first book. Ryan’s Father won The Clash of the Titles book of the month for January 2014 and was one of three finalists in the published contemporary fiction category of the 2014 Oregon Christian Writers Cascade Writing Contest and Awards. Deliver Us was a finalist in COTT’s 2014 Laurel Awards. June has written four novels for Desert Breeze Publishing. The Bellewood Series, Give Us This Day, As We Forgive, and Deliver Us, and Hometown Fourth of July. Ryan’s Father is available from WhiteFire Publishing. Red and the Wolf, a modern day retelling of Little Red Riding Hood, and Books One and Two in the Almond Tree Series, For All Eternity and Echoes From the Past, are available from Amazon.com and Smashwords. June enjoys writing stories about characters who overcome the circumstances in their lives by the power of God and His Word. June uses her training in counseling and her Christian beliefs in creating characters who find freedom to live godly lives.
Sparksofember says
Wow – what a story! Half sad, half glorious. And if his mother and sister found the Lord before they passes, then they finally got to have their reunion after all.
June Foster says
Yes, it is sad, but I’m so grateful I know I’ll see Marshal in eternity. BTW, in A Hometown Fourth of July, the heroine’s last name is Marshal. You can guess why! Hugs, June
Sparksofember says
As for witnessing him pass, it sounds similar to what my mother has told me about my grandfather’s passing. It was a powerful witness to her sibling who is not yet saved.
June Foster says
Liz, thanks so much for allowing me to share Marshall’s story today. I hope many are blessed by it. Blessings, June Foster