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: Unspoken by Jann Alexander

BOOK REVIEW: Unspoken by Jann Alexander

Unspoken brings to life a resilient eleven-year-old girl, Ruby Lee Becker, whose family and farm are trapped in the double whammy of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. The recurrent dust storms kill her baby sister and grandmother and leave Ruby with weakened...

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BOOK REVIEW: Follow Me to Africa by Penny Haw

BOOK REVIEW: Follow Me to Africa by Penny Haw

My expectations were high for Follow Me To Africa. As a budding paleoanthropologist in my youth and a lover of the Serengeti, I looked forward to discovering more about Mary Leakey’s work as a paleoanthropologist. However, this fictional biography failed to live up to...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Ancients by John Larison

BOOK REVIEW: The Ancients by John Larison

The Ancients is a post-apocalyptic climate novel. One family lives a prehistoric-feeling life. They live in isolation in the wilderness trying to survive after the fish and elk they depend on for food begin to disappear. The rest of their tribe has moved on, hoping...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

BOOK REVIEW: The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

I read The Name of the Rose (Il nome della rosa) in Italian when it was first released in Italy back in 1980. For someone who was only fluent in conversational Italian, it was a tough go, so when it was released in translation in 1983, I read it again and loved it...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Book of Thorns by  Hester Fox

BOOK REVIEW: The Book of Thorns by Hester Fox

During the Napoleonic era in Europe, flowers and their “secret meanings” became a bona fide craze; for example, Pierre-Joseph Redouté, a painter and botanist from the Austrian Netherlands, was renowned for his watercolors of roses, lilies, and other flowers, many of...

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BOOK REVIEW: Laurus by Eugene Vodolazkin

BOOK REVIEW: Laurus by Eugene Vodolazkin

Laurus describes the life of a fictional fifteenth-century ascetic Russian folk healer, pilgrim, and monk. Arseny, the protagonist, after his parents die of the plague, is raised by his grandfather, a skilled healer who teaches his grandson both healing and reading...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Weight of Ink by Rachel Kadish

BOOK REVIEW: The Weight of Ink by Rachel Kadish

The Weight of Ink is a three point-of-view (Helen Watt, a British professor with Parkinson’s disease; her graduate student, Aaron Levy; and Ester Velasquez, a Jewish immigrant who serves as a scribe to a blind rabbi who lost his vision in the Inquisition. This is also...

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BOOK REVIEW: Swamplandia! by Karen Russell

BOOK REVIEW: Swamplandia! by Karen Russell

After reading Russell’s The Antidote recently and being enchanted with it, I decided to read some of her older works, beginning with Swamplandia!, her debut novel. Swamplandia! is a family-run tourist attraction on an island in the Everglades. The cast of characters...

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BOOK REVIEW: River of Lies by James L’Etoile

BOOK REVIEW: River of Lies by James L’Etoile

River of Lies is the second in author James L’Etoile’s Detective Emily Hunter Mystery series. Though it continues with the same characters both major and minor, it can easily be read as a standalone. I’ve read and enjoyed L’Etoile’s earlier Nathan Parker and Detective...

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BOOK REVIEW: Kills Well with Others by Deanna Raybourn

BOOK REVIEW: Kills Well with Others by Deanna Raybourn

Kills Well with Others is the sequel to Killers of a Certain Age. A quartet of “women of a certain age,” retired assassins Billie, Helen, Mary Alice, and Natalie are called out of retirement (they’re still waiting on their pensions) by the organization they work for,...

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BOOK REVIEW: My Name is Emilia del Valle by Isabel Allende

BOOK REVIEW: My Name is Emilia del Valle by Isabel Allende

My Name is Emilia del Valle has everything I typically look for in fiction, especially women's fiction and historical fiction: an indomitable female protagonist facing sexism, unjust social mores, and other obstacles in her life. Somehow, this novel fails to deliver...

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BOOK REVIEW: Shadow of the Solstice by Anne Hillerman

BOOK REVIEW: Shadow of the Solstice by Anne Hillerman

  Each year I look forward to the next installment of the Leaphorn/Chee/Manuelito Navajo mysteries by the father-daughter duo of Tony and Anne Hillerman. Shadow of the Solstice is the 28th novel in the series. They are consistently good reads, and I have read...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Language of the Birds by K.A. Merson

BOOK REVIEW: The Language of the Birds by K.A. Merson

The Language of the Birds is a Da Vinci Code-type of young-adult exploit filled with complicated ciphers, codes, puzzles, American history, and conspiracy theories involving Herbert Hoover, the US President who botched the American recovery from the Great Depression....

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BOOK REVIEW: Roll the Sun Across the Sky by Barbara Linn Probst

BOOK REVIEW: Roll the Sun Across the Sky by Barbara Linn Probst

I was immersed in Roll the Sun Across the Sky from the first line: “The summer before I ruin his life …” Of course, I had to learn how the protagonist, a twenty-four-year-old woman, destroys someone’s life!  That the story involves a trip across Europe during the...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Last Maasai Warrior by Frank Coates

BOOK REVIEW: The Last Maasai Warrior by Frank Coates

The Last Maasai Warrior is a fascinating historical fiction account of British colonization of Kenya which has many parallels to the invasion of North America by Europeans and the ensuing genocide of Native Americans.  The British, in 1904, yield the Maasai control of...

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Author Suanne Schafer: The Art of Words.

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