<i>Blood Meridian</i> is his masterpiece . . . An astonishing sanguinary epic dealing with the Indian wars of the 1840s in West Texas and Mexico . . . Unlike anything I have ever read in recent years, an extraordinary, breathtaking achievement
- John Banville, author of <i>The Sea</i>,
A bloody and starkly beautiful tale
- Stephen Amidon, Sunday Times
Possibly the greatest American novel of the past 25 years
- Aleksandar Hemon, author of <i>The World and All That It Holds</i> and <i>The Lazarus Project</i>,
I have rarely encountered anything as powerful, as unsettling, or as memorable as <i>Blood Meridian</i> . . . A nightmare odyssey
Evening Standard
The Judge is the book, and the Judge is, short of Moby Dick, the most monstrous apparition in all of American literature
- Harlold Bloom, on the character of Judge Holden in <i>Blood Meridian</i>,
McCarthy distances us not only from the historical past, not only from our cowboy-and-Indian images of it, but also revisionist theories that make white men the villains and Indians the victims. All men are unremittingly bloodthirsty here, poised at a peak of violence, the "meridian" from which their civilization will quickly fall
New York Times Book Review
In <i>Blood Meridian</i>, McCarthy reaches the peak of his style: spare and ornate at once, repetitious but endlessly readable
Guardian
<i>Blood Meridian</i>, published in 1985, is a brilliant, uncompromising work of fiction â imagine if the authors of the King James Bible, their hands guided Satan, wrote a western
The Times