"Skidmore is a social historian of photography, and with this perspective she examines Schäffer's influence. From this publication, you can expect a feminist, academic and analytical approach to discovering Schäffer.... Throughout the book, Skidmore unpacks several fallacies in previous interpretations of Schäffer's life, character, writing and photography. Pairing these commonly misconstrued 'facts' and assumptions with thorough research on existing literature - as well as newly examined material - Skidmore brings forth a new layer to the reconstruction of Schäffer's character and meaning of her work." [Full article at https://crowfootmedia.com/2018/05/10/review-searching-for-mary-schaffer] -- Tera Swanson -- Canadian Rockies Annual 2018, 20180510
"In her new book, Skidmore portrays Schäffer in a nuanced way by discussing the scientific and artistic communities she came from, as well as the lives of the people she travelled with. She also dissolves some of the more persistent stereotypes people use to describe Schäffer.... Readers of Skidmore's new book will better understand why Schäffer's work has moved people for so long." -- Madeleine Cummings -- Edmonton Examiner, 20171213
"...a full and fascinating narrative of Schäffer's adult life, including her four-month summer excursions, in 1907 and 1908, into remote areas of the Rockies of Alberta and BC.... In this detailed book, Skidmore writes Schäffer, deservedly, into a historical narrative heretofore populated mostly by men.... [I]t is a significant achievement." -- Stephen Ross Smith, Alberta Views Magazines, July/August 2018
"In this book, Skidmore considers four basic themes - women, wilderness, travel, and science. She asks questions, tells stories, and makes full use of material in the archives of Canada and the United States." Alberta History, Summer 2018
[T]his book makes a significant contribution to the field of Rocky Mountain studies, and others, too, will find use in its probing reflections on the unreliability of authorial voice, the subjectivity of photography, and settler/Indigenous relationships.... Skidmores readers will be left not only with an alternate interpretation of Schäffers life and work, but with useful strategies for tackling the mythic auras of other figures that loom large in the public imaginary." - Stéphanie Hornstein, RACAR 43.2 (2018)
"Skidmore's monograph offers a robust introduction to Schäffer's work and contributes to recent scholarship in American art that attends to work produced across the North American continent.... Overall, Skidmore delivers an analysis of Schäffer's prolific career as an artist and writer that will be of specific interest to scholars interested in the history of photography, women's studies, and the history of science.... Skidmore offers a refreshing alternative to other studies in her emphasis on the collaborative practices that Schäffer engaged in alongside other women who were drawn to the Canadian Rockies during the early twentieth century." [Full review at http://journalpanorama.org/searching-for-mary-schaffer] -- Katherine Mintie -- Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art, Spring 2018, 20180501