My Little Towns

Thanks for Visiting My Little Towns

Anna Maria Island beach

Creating these coastal communities is one of my favorite parts of being a writer. I hope when you read them, you feel like you’re stepping into someplace warm, welcoming, and maybe even a little magical.

If you’ve ever visited Sanibel, Siesta Key, or Anna Maria Island, I’d love to hear what you loved most! Or tell me about your favorite beach town—I might just use it as inspiration for the next book…

— Kay

How I Create my Coastal Town Settings for my Books

How I Create My Coastal Town Settings

(…and why I always want to move there when I’m done writing a book!)

small town fiction. A proch swing with a view of the sea.

One of the questions I get asked the most is:
“Are your beach towns based on real places?”

And the short answer is… sort of!

I write fictional towns because I like the freedom to shape them exactly the way I want. (Need a bakery with checkered floors and cinnamon rolls the size of your face? Done. A cozy cottage with a weathered porch swing and a secret room in the attic? Absolutely.)

But these made-up towns are always inspired by real places I’ve visited and fallen in love with, especially along the beautiful Gulf Coast of Florida.

I try to put in the Southwest Florida spark

Over the years, I’ve spent time in some truly magical places: Sanibel Island, Anna Maria Island, and Siesta Key—each with their own laid-back charm, salty breezes, and that feeling like time slows down just a little.

There’s something about the Southwest Gulf Coast that gets under your skin in the best way. The pastel cottages. The turquoise water. The locals who wave from their bikes. The way the air smells like salt and sunscreen and maybe a little coconut.

Those experiences live in my memory—and they always find their way onto the page.

I try to build a fictional town that feels real

When I sit down to create a new series, I start with the vibe of the place. Is it sleepy and small, like Belle Island? Or a town where four generations of Parker Women live like Moonbeam Bay? Is it the kind of town where everyone knows everyone… or where someone might go to disappear for a while?

From there, I sketch out the heart of the community:

  • The main street with a bookstore, or cafe, or an ice cream shop

  • The beach that holds everyone’s memories

  • The homes with their porches and peeling paint, and potted plants

  • The people who make it feel like home

  • Old hotels, B&Bs, or cozy inns

I want each of my towns to feel like a place you could step into—where you’d run into a friend at the market, sit in on a book club, or help plan the town’s Fourth of July parade. (Or Christmas festival. Or pie contest. You get the idea.)

The towns are a blend of memory and imagination

Some details come straight from my own memories—like sunsets on Anna Maria Island or shell-hunting on Sanibel. Others I invent completely. But the goal is always the same: to create a world that feels real and comforting, a place you’d want to visit (or maybe even move to, if it weren’t fictional!).

And the best part?
Once I finish a series, I get to build a brand-new town. New characters, new quirks, new secrets waiting to be uncovered.

It never gets old.

Where to start if you’d like a little escape

If you want to take a stroll through one of my fictional beach towns, here are a couple places you can start:

  • The Lighthouse Point series – set on Belle Island, full of family, secrets, and second chances. My first beach series where it all began!

  • Saltwater Sunrises – book one in the Magnolia Key series, where friendship and new beginnings shine. (and just a short ferry ride from the coast—right near Moonbeam Bay and Belle Island, of course.)

  • Seaside Christmas Wishes – a Belle Island holiday story full of nostalgia and hope

You can find all of my books right here.

Thanks for visiting my little towns

Creating these coastal communities is one of my favorite parts of being a writer. I hope when you read them, you feel like you’re stepping into someplace warm, welcoming, and maybe even a little magical.

If you’ve ever visited Sanibel, Siesta Key, Anna Maria, or Sarasota, I’d love to hear what you loved most! Or tell me about your favorite beach town—I might just use it as inspiration for the next book…

— Kay 

Second Chances in Fiction

Why I Love Second Chances in Fiction (and in Life)

Why I love second chances in fiction books

There’s something about a second chance that just gets me every time.

Maybe it’s because I’ve had a few of my own—those moments when life knocks you sideways, and you have to figure out how to stand back up and try again. Or maybe it’s because I believe we all deserve the space to grow, to change, and to start fresh… even if it’s not perfect the second time around either.

Either way, I can’t stop writing about it.

The Magic of a Do-Over

Second chances come in all shapes and sizes. In my books, it might be a woman returning to her hometown after decades away. Or an old flame showing up unexpectedly. Or someone rediscovering a dream they’d tucked away years ago because life just got too busy.

Whatever the form, I love the idea that it’s never too late—not for love, not for healing, not for happiness.

I think there’s real beauty in that.

Second Chances Feel Real

Let’s face it—we’ve all had moments where Plan A didn’t quite work out.

Maybe it was a relationship that ended. A job that burned us out. A path we followed because it made sense at the time, only to realize later that it wasn’t what we truly wanted.

That’s what I try to capture in my stories. Not fairy tale perfection, but real women dealing with real life… and discovering that sometimes, the second chapter is even better than the first.

My Favorite Kinds of Second Chances

In case you haven’t noticed (ha!), second chances pop up a lot in my books. Some of my favorites to write include:

  • Women finding love again after heartbreak

  • Friends reconnecting after years apart

  • Mothers and daughters mending old wounds

  • Someone finally chasing that dream they put on the back burner for everyone else

  • That man from your past—the one that got away—showing up again…

I don’t always plan it that way, but these themes sneak into my stories again and again. Probably because they sneak into life that way, too.

I write about second chances not just because it makes for a good story (though it definitely does), but because I think we need to be reminded that we’re allowed to change directions. We’re allowed to make mistakes and come back from them. We’re allowed to begin again—even if we’re starting over at 40, 50, 60, or beyond.

Second chances are hopeful. And I think hope is one of the most important things a story can offer.

If You’re Craving That Feeling…

If you love books where women find strength, community, and maybe a little unexpected romance after life doesn’t go quite as planned, you’re in the right place.

A few of my second-chance favorites I’ve written?

  • Return to the Island– my all-time favorite character, Tally, gets her second chance. It is book 5 in the Lighthouse Point Series

  • Lilacs by the Sea– a married couple on the brink of calling it quits discover there’s more waiting for them than they expected. (Book 5 in the Moonbeam Bay series)

You can check out all my books right here.

Thanks for reading—and for believing in the power of a second chance.
If you’ve ever had one of your own (or wish you could take one), I’d love to hear your story. Come say hi over on Instagram or Facebook, or sign up for my newsletter so we can stay in touch.

— Kay