Bestselling Author

Suanne Schafer

the art of words

Bestselling Author

Suanne Schafer

the art of words

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“There’s plenty of sharp, suspenseful action to savor here in this impressively poignant, hauntingly realistic, and searingly moving tale. Schafer intensively explores themes of racism, violence, war, and human welfare. Vivid, boldly written, life-affirming historical fiction drawn from the horrors of the Rwandan genocide crisis.” Kirkus Reviews

Now a #1 Amazon Bestseller!

In response to the worldwide epidemic of genocides and to mark the thirtieth anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide, Suanne Schafer has issued a second edition of Hunting the Devil, revised and with a new Author’s Note. The electronic edition was free from April 7 through July 15, 2024, the hundred days the 1994 genocide lasted.

Part medical procedural, part global political thriller, part vigilante novel, and part fractured romance, Hunting the Devil moves from the dusty washboard roads of Rwanda to an inner-city hospital in America to the Natural History Museum of Belgium to the halls of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha, Tanzania as it deftly traces one woman’s journey toward justice.

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“The depth of emotion of a modernist novel and the epic scope of a historical saga.” —Alicia Rasley, author of The Year She Fell

Passion & Paint (formerly A Different Kind of Fire) depicts one woman’s battle to balance husband, family, career, and ambition. Torn between her childhood sweetheart, her forbidden passion for another woman, the nobleman she had to marry, and becoming a renowned painter, Ruby’s choices mold her in ways she could never have foreseen…

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“The depth of emotion of a modernist novel and the epic scope of a historical saga.” —Alicia Rasley, author of The Year She Fell

Ruby Schmidt has the talent, the drive, even the guts to enroll in art school, leaving behind her childhood home and the beau she always expected to marry. Her life at the Academy seems heavenly at first, but she soon learns that societal norms in the East are as restrictive as those back home in West Texas. Rebelling against the insipid imagery woman are expected to produce, Ruby embraces bohemian life. Her burgeoning sexuality drives her into a life-long love affair with another woman and into the arms of an Italian baron. With the Panic of 1893, the nation spirals into a depression, and Ruby’s career takes a similar downward trajectory. After thinking she could have it all, Ruby, now pregnant and broke, returns to Texas rather than join the queues at the neighborhood soup kitchen. She discovers her life back home is as challenging as that in Philadelphia.

Passion & Paint (formerly A Different Kind of Fire) depicts one woman’s battle to balance husband, family, career, and ambition. Torn between her childhood sweetheart, her forbidden passion for another woman, the nobleman she had to marry, and becoming a renowned painter, Ruby’s choices mold her in ways she could never have foreseen…

COMPLETE BOOK LIST
All the latest on my new book releases, including publishing news, critical acclaim, synopses and purchase information. View current and previous titles, plus a dynamic news feed on everything related to my short stories, articles and novels.

COMPLETE BOOK LIST

All the latest on my new book releases, including publishing news, critical acclaim, synopses and purchase information. View current and previous titles, plus a dynamic news feed on everything related to my short stories, articles and novels.

ABOUT SUANNE SCHAFER

Suanne Schafer, born in West Texas at the height of the Cold War, finds it ironic that grade school drills for tornadoes and nuclear war were the same: hide beneath your desk and kiss your rear-end goodbye. Now a retired family-practice physician whose only child has fledged the nest, her pioneer ancestors and world travels fuel her imagination.

ABOUT SUANNE SCHAFER

Suanne Schafer, born in West Texas at the height of the Cold War, finds it ironic that grade school drills for tornadoes and nuclear war were the same: hide beneath your desk and kiss your rear-end goodbye. Now a retired family-practice physician whose only child has fledged the nest, her pioneer ancestors and world travels fuel her imagination.

AUTHOR NEWS, REVIEWS & VIEWS

Latest Updates From a Texas Girl Who's Seen The World
BOOK REVIEW: Symbol Maker’s Daughter by Clare Gutiérrez

BOOK REVIEW: Symbol Maker’s Daughter by Clare Gutiérrez

Symbol Maker’s Daughter is a historical romance set in the time just before the emergence of Henry Tudor who will become King Henry VII, the sovereign who ends the War of the Roses, forms the Tudor dynasty, and becomes the father of Henry VIII. The protagonist is...

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Book Review: Attribution by Linda Moore

Book Review: Attribution by Linda Moore

Art history graduate student Cate Adamson struggles to place herself in the male-dominated world of art history. Her doctoral advisor, the misogynistic Professor Herat Jones, has not only turned down every dissertation topic she’s broached, but has given her scut work...

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Book Review: Many Are Invited by Dennis Cuesta

Book Review: Many Are Invited by Dennis Cuesta

Set in the late 1990s, Many Are Invited starts as a sort of buddy story. The two male leads, Steve and John, both in their mid thirties, work for the phone company trying to resolve the Y2K problem of what will happen to the world’s computer systems when 12/31/1999...

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Book Review: Unwieldy Creatures by Addie Tsai

Book Review: Unwieldy Creatures by Addie Tsai

I have been on a bit of a horror binge (and I rarely read horror) starting with Kris Waldheer’s retelling of Frankenstein, Unnatural Creatures, told from the points of view of three women in Victor Frankenstein's life; followed by Mary Shelley’s original Frankenstein;...

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BOOK REVIEW: Disappearing Earth by Julia Phillips

BOOK REVIEW: Disappearing Earth by Julia Phillips

Julia Phillips’s debut novel, Disappearing Earth, is structured somewhat akin to Jennifer Egan’s A Visit from the Goon Squad. Phillips writes multiple story lines each with its own narrator, and the full account plays out over the course of a year. It opens with...

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Book Review: Double Exposure by Jeannée Sacken

Book Review: Double Exposure by Jeannée Sacken

Author Jeannée Sacken draws upon her experience as an international photojournalist to heighten reality in Double Exposure, the sequel to Behind the Lens. Annie Hawkins Green is a veteran photojournalist embedded during wars around the world. She’s dropped her married...

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BOOK REVIEW: Landslide by Adam Sikes

BOOK REVIEW: Landslide by Adam Sikes

Landslide is author Sikes’s debut novel and the start of a series involving U.S. Marine veteran Mason Hackett. After being deployed in Iraq and losing his best friend in a disastrous military maneuver, he moves to London, goes to business school, and tries to start...

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Book Review: ’Til All These Things Be Done by Suzanne Moyers

Book Review: ’Til All These Things Be Done by Suzanne Moyers

Set in East Texas in the second decade of the 1900s, this novel depicts the events of the era (racial discrimination, discrimination against Catholics and foreigners, the 1918 and 1919 flu pandemics, poverty, the Ku Klux Klan, white supremacy, and social upheaval) as...

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BOOK REVIEW: Blue Desert by  Celia Jeffries

BOOK REVIEW: Blue Desert by Celia Jeffries

In Blue Desert, Alice George, a headstrong young woman of sixteen, is trapped by the societal constraints of Edwardian England and a family that doesn't understand her. In 1910 her father moves the family to Morocco, and her life finally changes. On a drive with her...

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Book Review: Spirit Daughters by Carol Potenza

Book Review: Spirit Daughters by Carol Potenza

Spirit Daughters continues author Carole Potenza’s Nicky Matthews Mystery series. I’ve read every Tony Hillerman mystery and, having been raised in the Southwest, love how he (and later his daughter Anne Hillerman) captured so beautifully the aura of the land and its...

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Book Review: Sign of the Eight by Benjamin Lebert

Book Review: Sign of the Eight by Benjamin Lebert

Sign of the Eight is a teen/young adult epic fantasy. I felt at times it was closer to horror than fantasy with vampirelike creatures from the past, Tristan Nightsworn and Martha von Falkenstein, arising from a lake and feeding on humans. He is the messenger of doom;...

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Book Review: The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker

Book Review: The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker

      I read The Half-Drowned King because I embarked on a spree of reading Viking/Norse related books. Some time ago, I read all thirteen of Bernard Cornwell’s Saxon series, and more recently, I've read The Real Valkyrie by Nancy Marie Brown, The...

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Book Review: Where Wild Peaches Grow: A Novel  by Cade Bentley

Book Review: Where Wild Peaches Grow: A Novel by Cade Bentley

Where Wild Peaches Grow is set in Natchez, Mississippi, and depicts the dissolution and resolution of the Davenport family, primarily through the eyes of Nona. Thinking she has been betrayed by her family, she leaves them and heads to Chicago. There, she becomes a...

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Book Review: West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge

Book Review: West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge

West with Giraffes has been on my to-be-read pile since it came out, and I regret taking so long to get to it. For some reason, the title made me think of Beryl Markham’s marvelous memoir, West with the Night, so I was expecting something along the lines of a safari...

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Author Suanne Schafer: The Art of Words.

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