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: Tulip Fever by Deborah Moggach

BOOK REVIEW: Tulip Fever by Deborah Moggach

If you enjoyed The Girl with the Pearl Earring, The Black Tulip, A Light of her Own, The Company Daughters, or The Signature of All Things, you'll enjoy Tulip Fever. Set in Amsterdam of the 1630s at the height of “tulip fever” where crazed traders and growers...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker

BOOK REVIEW: The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker

Give me a feminist retelling of almost any story, and I am quite happy. I particularly enjoy the revisionist accounts of the Greek and Roman myths that have come out recently. This book has been on my to-read list for several years. I regret not reading it sooner. The...

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BOOK REVIEW: Releasing the Reins by Catherine Matthews

BOOK REVIEW: Releasing the Reins by Catherine Matthews

Releasing the Reins is Catherine Matthews’ debut novel, and she successfully pulls off a genre-breaking melange of coming of age, women’s fiction, mystery, and modern western, set against the vast expanse of Alaska. Matthews successfully blends the points of view of...

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BOOK REVIEW: Structured Madness by C.S. Fuqua

BOOK REVIEW: Structured Madness by C.S. Fuqua

Recently I reread Dylan Thomas’s villanelle “Do not go gentle into that good night” which was written in 1947 for his dying father. Somehow, it touched me much more than when I read it in college, perhaps because I am considerably older. After reading a fair amount of...

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BOOK REVIEW: Woman on Fire by Lisa Barr

BOOK REVIEW: Woman on Fire by Lisa Barr

Lisa Barr’s Woman on Fire is not to be mistaken for the recent movie, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, a lovely historical period piece on film. While they both deal with artists, Woman on Fire is a contemporary art heist novel set in Chicago, Berlin, Montana, Miami, and...

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BOOK REVIEW: Fugitive Colors by  Lisa Barr

BOOK REVIEW: Fugitive Colors by Lisa Barr

Fugitive Colors explores the rape of Europe’s artistic patrimony before and during World War II, but it does so at a more personal level than most books I’ve read on the subject (Monuments Men, etc). Jakov Klein, a young Orthodox Jew, is born to be a painter. After a...

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BOOK REVIEW: Great Small Things by Jodi Picoult

BOOK REVIEW: Great Small Things by Jodi Picoult

Having recently read an advanced readers' copy of Jodi Picoult’s By Any Other Name (due out August 20, 2024), I was interested enough to start picking up some of her back list, this time Small Great Things. This book in particular attracted me for two reasons: I am a...

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BOOK REVIEW: Light of the Fire by Sarahlyn Bruck

BOOK REVIEW: Light of the Fire by Sarahlyn Bruck

In Light of the Fire, Beth and Ally, the only girls on their high school soccer team, fight back against their male soccer team’s  misogynistic “pranks”; i.e., they lock the girls in the janitor’s closet so they won’t be able to out-perform the boys before soccer...

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BOOK REVIEW: Broken Bayou by Jennifer Moorhead

BOOK REVIEW: Broken Bayou by Jennifer Moorhead

Broken Bayou is author Jennifer Moorhead’s debut thriller. Protagonist Willa Watters, a child psychologist with a new book to promote, throws herself off the deep end during her first major television interview about the book. To escape the blowback, she returns to...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Poppy Field by Caroline Kellems

BOOK REVIEW: The Poppy Field by Caroline Kellems

I enjoyed The Poppy Field very much, reading it in two sittings. An evangelical preacher from Indiana is called to preach the Gospel in Guatemala and drags his wife and two children there very much against their will. From the moment they land, they are faced with...

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BOOK REVIEW: Molly Malloy and the Angel of Death by Maria Vale

BOOK REVIEW: Molly Malloy and the Angel of Death by Maria Vale

Molly Malloy and the Angel of Death is an oddball, often laugh-out-loud funny, romance. It was really refreshing to read such an atypical romance. There are no handsome billionaires, no rich doctors, no sexy shape-shifters, no hot hunks in kilts; instead, the female...

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BOOK REVIEW: Hearts that Cut by Kika Hatzopoulou

BOOK REVIEW: Hearts that Cut by Kika Hatzopoulou

I had a hard time getting into Hearts that Cut. I suspect it might have helped to have read the first of the duology (Threads that Bind) before digging into this one. I simply never felt settled or oriented until about one-third of the way through. I found it so...

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BOOK REVIEW: Midnight in Istanbul by Kathryn Gauci

BOOK REVIEW: Midnight in Istanbul by Kathryn Gauci

As always, Kathryn Gauci's research is impeccable as she returns to the Middle East with Midnight in Istanbul after her last book being set in the Pyrenees. She really captures the atmosphere of Istanbul, its food and culture, as well as its post-Ataturk cosmopolitan...

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