Susan Froetschel is the author of four previous novels—Fear of Beauty (named top mystery/suspense by the Military Writers Society of America and nominated for a Mary Higgins Clark Award), Alaska Gray, Interruptions, and Royal Escape. She has taught at /5(15). Evil is one. Beauty is another. Both require an observer, and both emerge as the result of another person’s assessment. An individual can never be completely confident that she is beautiful or free of evil. The designation demands acknowledgment from another person.” ― Susan Froetschel, Fear of Beauty/5. · The result, FEAR OF BEAUTY, is an “exceptionally well-written tale of love, loss, trust, and greed with appeal that reaches far beyond mystery fans”—according to PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. The premise, a mother’s loss of her son, is a universal theme that .
Read "Fear of Beauty" by Susan Froetschel available from Rakuten Kobo. The battered body of an Afghan boy is found at the base of a cliff outside a remote village in Helmand Province, Afghani. Susan Froetschel is the author of five mystery books, including Allure of Deceit and Fear of Beauty, set in Afghanistan. Her novels explore parents and children who tackle public policies that others in their community take for granted. View my complete profile. Susan Froetschel is the author of four mystery-suspense novels, including Fear of Beauty, set in rural Afghanistan. Since , she has worked for YaleGlobal, an online publication based at Yale University, which explores globalization and the world's connections through politics, policy, products, people and ideas.
Find many great new used options and get the best deals for Fear of Beauty by Susan Froetschel (, Trade Paperback) at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products!. The result, FEAR OF BEAUTY, is an “exceptionally well-written tale of love, loss, trust, and greed with appeal that reaches far beyond mystery fans”—according to PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. The premise, a mother’s loss of her son, is a universal theme that Froetschel hopes readers around the world will relate to. In her latest novel, Fear of Beauty, Susan Froetschel juxtaposes the plight of an illiterate Afghani housewife trying to solve her son's murder with the mission of a nearby Army outpost to bolster the Afghanistan farming economy. The story is told from two very different perspectives, each weaving an independent subplot into the story.
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