[ An] outstanding portfolioa book that belongs in every football fan's collection. (Kirkus, Starred Review) Riveting...Thirty years after Buzz Bissingers bestseller chronicled the Permian Panthers 1988 season, these black and white photos are as compelling as ever...the grainy photographs have a grittiness suited to the hardscrabble West Texas landscape-you can practically taste the dust in the air. Clarks images of lonely highways and abandoned downtown storefronts have a grand, cinematic feel, while his portraits of players lifting weights, brushing their hair, or getting dressed for a game are almost unbearably intimate. (Texas Monthly) [ An] impressive illustrated volumeThis is a fitting coda for fans of the book and show, and anyone with an interest in the rural America of a bygone era will want to take a look. (Publishers Weekly) [ Clark's] images are poignant, just like Bissinger's book about the Permian Panthers' quest to win the state championship before ultimately failing...The photographs are a visceral reminder of the emotions the young men went through before many considered them just football-playing characters on a screen...Friday Night Lives shows the real players and place that have largely become fictionalized to audiences across the country. (Texas Highways) Through Clark's time capsule, viewers can hear the cheers of the crowd, the sounds of the locker room, the music played by the pep band, and feel the hot West Texas sun beating down on the football players during drills. (Smithsonian Magazine, "The Ten Best Photography Books of 2020") The photos [ in Friday Night Lives] further illuminate the town of Odessa and bring to life the real Boobie Miles and Coach Gaines, documenting the disparate emotions that marked the dramatic season. (Inside Hook, "The 20 Best Coffee Table Books of 2020") Powerful...An impactful collection on the enduring popularity of Friday Night Lights, that will appeal to fans of the book, movie, or TV series. (Library Journal) The notion of time passing runs through the pages of [ Friday Night Lives]...The book from UT Press is part-time capsule, showing the Panthers in their glory days. But Clark also captures how the years have had its way with the once-young Odessa heroes, having returned to West Texas to photograph the men in their current lives. (Alcalde) In black-and-white photos, Clark presents an intimate body of work that captures the innocence of life before the 21st century, as well as what came after. (BuzzFeed News)