“The mistaken assumption of past Bigfoot investigation is that the phenomenon is best understood from the perspective of natural history. Joshua Blu Buhs has written an original and engaging book that tells us the meaning of the hairy beast that won’t go away yet we cannot seem to find. Bigfoot is the definitive history of the legend’s social and cultural context, and it offers an explanation for the phenomenon that will be pondered and discussed for years to come.”
— David Daegling, author of Bigfoot Exposed
“While Bigfoot researchers have grown weary of skeptical treatments of the topic, Joshua Buhs’s examination of the Sasquatch is refreshingly crisp and insightful, as opposed to demeaningly debunking. His grasp of the popular cultural significance of Bigfoot is outstanding and his overview of the legacy of these creatures is topnotch. Highly recommended.”
— Loren Coleman, author of The Field Guide to Bigfoot and Other Mystery Primates
"Buhs is at his amused best when following the exploits of Bigfoot's human handlers—the colorful band of true believers, hoaxers and pseudo-documentarists who constructed this greatest of all shaggy-hominid stories."
— Publishers Weekly
“Thoroughly discredited hoaxes regarding seeing or shooting an actual Bigfoot notwithstanding, media interest in whether giant wild humanoids exist is readily re-ignitable. In 1962, Robert Hatfield struck the match when a ‘half-man, half-beast monster’ chased him into a cabin but ran off before Hatfield trained a gun on it. Good for Hatfield, maybe, since the gun wasn’t loaded, but fortuitous, anyway, for keeping the Bigfoot legend going, since once again there was no physical evidence of the fabled creature. Buhs undertakes the telling of ‘how the modern myth of Bigfoot emerged” and uses the terms Bigfoot, Yeti, Abominable Snowman, and Sasquatch more or less interchangeably throughout, since all refer to not-quite-human creatures living in the wild that are preternaturally elusive. Proceeding era by era and place by place, Buhs evaluates the stories of encounters with the giant creatures, deconstructs hoaxes, and evaluates genuine studies in service of tracking down the truth. His conclusions seem well-founded but are highly unlikely to end debate.”
— Booklist
“The value of Buhs’s book is in its synthesizing of the many historical Bigfoot/Sasquatch stories into one readable narrative, and its summing-up of the state of Bigfoot research and belief today.”
— H.J. Kirchhoff, Globe and Mail
"Adroitly researched and well-documented. . . . Much more focused and thorough than G. Reece’s Weird Science and Bizarre Beliefs and a very suitable cultural history complement to the anthropological focus of C. Daegling’s Bigfoot Exposed. Highly recommended.”--Choice
— Choice
"The stories are invatiably interesting, sometimes strange, often humorous and always entertaining. It's a good read, particularly if you've ever camped in a wilderness and wondered what lurks in the darkness just beyond the dying campfire light."
— Paul Fattig, Mail Tribune
"[Bigfoot] is an oversized footprint of Americana, and a fun read. Bigfoot may not be stomping through the American wilderness, but his legend still lives in the forests of our imagination."
— Jason Weeks, Sacramento Book Review
"Joshua Blu Buhs, listed in the back cover as 'an independent scholar' gets a two thumbs-up from me for doing something no author in Bigfooting history ever achieved: he published a rare picture of the late Betty Allen, someone who was prominent when things got afoot in northern California around 1958. The depth and level of scholarship of his work is impressive, no doubt, but 'believers' might be taken aback by the cover of the book...and also by Mr. Buhs prefatory remarks: 'I still don't think that Bigfoot exists...'"
— Daniel Perez, Bigfoot Times
"Smart" and "Wide-ranging"
— BookForum
"This book is a must for every GCS member! ... Here, between the covers of one book, is all you ever wanted to know about Bigfoot - and about Sasquatch, the Abominable Snowman, the Yeti and the strange Wildman of the Woods - that perhaps roam uncharted forests......Bigfoot is guaranteed to become a classic."
— Ghost Club Journal
"Bigfoot's Andy Warhol moment occurred in 1967... For Buhs, more the cultural anthropologist..., Bigfoot surged due to a convergence of circumstances: It was a working-class male reaction against feminism and civil rights, a nostalgic return to a lost wilderness, a classic horror movie return-of-the-repressed with Mansonesque killer-hippie trappings."
— Guelph Mercury
"Author Joshua Blu Buhs is an 'independent scholar' and approaches Bigfoot the way a tenured scholar might. In 'Bigfoot: The Life and Times of a Legend,' Buhs adds a 20-page bibliography that gives the book an air of academic legitimacy; he also uses more footnotes and citations than a David Foster Wallace fanboy."
— San Francisco Chronicle
"This book, by author Blu Buhs, is really well-written and well-done, and it tends to take the skeptical tack, of course, giving a history of some of the major players in the Bigfoot field and some behind-the-scenes information on each....I would most assuredly recommend this book."
— SSA Blog
"In his witty account, the American scholar ans sceptic Joshua Blu Buhs sets out in search of an animal variously claimed as America's only remaining ape, an extant Neanderthal, or an even older hominid such as Gigantophithecus.... In his postmodern attempt to pin down Bigfoot, Buhs's focus is on the hunters, rather than the hunted; this is not so much a book about Bigfoot as the belief in him."
— The Telegraph
"...likely to be the definitive history of the Bigfoot of the imagination for some considerable time, tracking the development of the myth, showing the various streams of the story: the theme of the Wildman in all human cultures; Yeti hunting in the Himalayas; Canadian Pacific tales of Sasquatch collected by John Burns; the modern fakelore of Bigfoot which rapidly went feral to become real folklore."
— John Rimmer's Magonia Blog