Optimistically billed as the next Stoner, this 1967 reissue is in fact the better novel...a rich and challenging psychodrama, based on brilliant characterisation... With its echoes of East of Eden and Brokeback Mountain, this satisfyingly complex story deserves another shot at rounding up public admiration * Guardian * [ Savages] prose is vivid and direct [ his] descriptions of nature have real power a slow-burn psychological western. * The Times * An exhilarating drama between two brothers set in Twenties Montana, and better even than Stoner * Daily Telegraph * Something aching and lonely and terrible of the west is caught forever on Savage's pages, and the most compelling and painful of [ his] books is The Power of the Dog, a work of literary art The shocking turn of the books final pages keeps the story bright as a blade to the end...This is the perfect example of a book that never quite made it to the rank of classic...but is more than worthy of resurrection now * New Statesman * Flinty naturalism, lean prose and authentic portrait of the American frontier...it without doubt deserves belatedly to reach a wider audience * The Sunday Times * Savage writes like thunder and lightning. A flash will illuminate startling detail, a rumble will bring a fierce revelation, a philosophy, a big picture. It has a jarring, unsettling effect, like many great books, a reminder of inevitable change, of civilizations crumbling * Los Angeles Times * First published in 1967, this reissue is becoming a word-of-mouth classic. * Emerald Street * The Power of the Dog by Thomas Savage is, quite simply, one of the finest contemporary novels I have ever read: set on a ranch in 1920s Montana, it is a taut, complex and superbly written exploration of family and landscape, of belonging and alienation, of repressed sensitivity and desire in an unforgivingly red-blooded world. There are scenes and characters so powerful that they haunt the memory like dreams, for the novel carries a charge well beyond its final, riveting pages. The Power of the Dog resurfaces to a new generation of readers, less likely to skirt around the homosexual undercurrent that drives this text to its ultimate twist of an ending Savage achievesan intense realness, unearthing the inner darkness of the American Dream. * Skinny *