RICK FOERSTER

WRITER | BUILDER

Hey, I’m Rick Foerster, a recovering startup executive turned writer. Before, I helped build and grow a company from zero to $2B+. It was the kind of career that’s supposed to fill the void and conquer all life’s questions.

For some reason, it didn’t. So I walked away from that life to disappear and start writing:

  • An End to Remember: my debut novel (coming soon), a post-apocalyptic survival story with a psychological bite.

  • The Way of Work: essays on meaning, identity, and reinvention.

Join me and let’s find a way to knock out all the big questions, while somehow remaining the center of attention. It’s the simple things, right?

Cheers, Rick

Rick Foerster

Praise for Rick’s Writing

A quote attributed to Ellen Kelsay, CEO of Business Group on Health, that reads 'A gift for conveying deep, thought-provoking ideas.' Next to the quote is a black and white photo of Ellen Kelsay smiling, with her name and title below.
Quote by Sara Pendergast: '[His] explorations about life remain terrifically interesting.' with a black-and-white portrait of Sara Pendergast, an artist, in the bottom left corner.
Quote by Christopher Morris, PhD, Associate Professor at George Mason, praising the clarity and sophistication of ideas in prose, accompanied by his black-and-white portrait.
Quote: 'Rick walks the walk. A lot of hard fought knowledge.' by Kristopher Abdelmessih, Founder of Moontower. Includes a black and white photo of Kristopher Abdelmessih with books in the background.
A quote reading 'Damn talented.' attributed to Khe Hy, founder of RadReads, next to a black-and-white photo of smiling man with short dark hair and a beard.
Quote by Kate Hammit, CMO of Splash: 'Distills down the hard stuff into accessible and memorable takeaways.' with a black and white headshot of Kate Hammit

My debut novel coming soon:

AN END TO REMEMBER

How do you stay human when the world forgets?

When civilization falls, an orphan lives by one rule: “forget to survive.” Forget his pain. Forget his past. And forget the unforgivable moment he failed the people he loved most.

It’s been several years since the “Wild” spread, an infection that turned people against each other. Now, in a walled-off camp on the outskirts of a ruined city, survivors force him and other orphans outside to scavenge, where they must avoid the mindless and violent former-humans that no one fully understands.

But surviving isn’t the hardest part, it’s finding a reason to keep going.

Memories and madness collide. Panic boils over inside the camp. And the boy must choose between the numbness that kept him alive and confronting the past he buried — one that unravels the truth about the world and the truth about his parents. A truth so sharp it could break him.

In the end, we are what we remember.

Fans of The Last of Us, Wool, and The Road will love this post-apocalyptic survival story that has a dark psychological bite.

And yes, it has an ending you won’t forget.


Advance Praise From Readers

“I woke up still thinking about it.”

Brian

“Hard to put down, so I didn’t.”

Mark

“Strong themes that are profound and engaging.”

Celia

“Tight, immersive, and filled with tension. I don’t usually read books this fast.”

Austin

“I wanted to come back to it each night.”

Kate

“Asks us what we hide away and who we truly are.”

Sara

“Had me crying [from a book] for the first time since high school.”

Diego

“Holy crap… a serious page turner.”

Noah

The Way of Work

Stories of people pushing work past its limits.

A newsletter for mid-career professionals who are successful on paper, but suspect work can’t deliver what it promised. Meaning, identity, and ambition without the hustle-guru nonsense.