Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Studhorse Man

Rate this book
The Studhorse Man is a classic Canadian odyssey--a story told by a madman who works naked in a bathtub. It is the tale of Hazard Lepage, last of the studhorse men, and owner of a superb blue stallion named Poseidon...the sole survivor of its breed. Hazard's maniacal search to find the perfect mare for this magnificent horse is opposed by his fiancée of thirteen years, Martha Proudfoot, so much so she refuses him both herself and her Arab mares. This is a compelling saga that will move all readers.

175 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1969

7 people are currently reading
214 people want to read

About the author

Robert Kroetsch

55 books24 followers
Robert Kroetsch was a Canadian novelist, poet, and non-fiction writer. He taught for many years at the University of Manitoba. Kroetsch spent multiple years in Vancouver, British Columbia before returning to Winnipeg where he continued to write. In 2004 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
56 (23%)
4 stars
82 (33%)
3 stars
48 (19%)
2 stars
34 (13%)
1 star
23 (9%)
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for kaelan.
279 reviews363 followers
January 2, 2018
UPDATE (2018 January 1):

Second read-through and yep, still excellent.

ORIGINAL REVIEW (2012 May 27):

I could fill a (hyperbolic) volume with gushing praise for this book, so rather than risk saying too much, I'm going to try and say just as much as I have to. What you need to know: this book, despite inevitably falling under the label of 'post-modern,' isn't stuffy, or even academic. On the contrary, it is—how should I say this?—fun. Even laugh-out-loud funny at times. I would go as far as to say that it's supremely entertaining. Yet The Studhorse Man is so much more. It's also sexy, intellectual, visceral. Maybe even tragic. (Kroestch, of course, would point to my apparent inability to adequately describe his novel as evidence for the intrinsic limitations of language. But I digress.)

Apart from writing poetry and fiction, Kroetsch was also quite the theorist—see, for instance, his excellent essay "For Play and Entrance" (note the sexual punniness of the title)—and it's impressive to observe how he can take (what could perhaps be deemed) dry and abstract concepts and instill them into a literary form that is both organic and engaging.

In conclusion, The Studhorse Man, despite being criminally under-read, is literature of the highest calibre.
Profile Image for Thomas.
588 reviews102 followers
June 11, 2021
this book is from the exotic and mysterious land of canada, and it's narrated by a questionably sane character who seems to live exclusively in a bathtub. he unreliably tells us the story of one obsessive failure's quest to perpetuate his unique horse breed by finding a mare for his one remaining stallion. along the way there are some comic situations and oddball characters and some allusive sex scenes and it's all a bit offbeat and vaguely magical realist in tone.
Profile Image for Phillip.
Author 2 books68 followers
April 8, 2017
An odd, interesting postmodern re-imagining of The Odyssey. This novel is set in Alberta around the time of WWII, and follows the rambling journey of Hazard LePage, one of the last remaining studhorse men--professional breeders of horses--as he makes his way through misadventures to his fiance Martha Proudfoot. The Greek influences here are hard to miss: a stallion named Poseidon, a narrator named Demeter, and even the last name Proudfoot may echo and invert the name Oedipus (one translation of which is something like "broken foot" or "lame foot"). But this is a distinctly pomo version, with the clinically insane narrator inserting himself at length into the 'biography' and musing throughout on the nature of life, love, sex, art, truth, etc.
Profile Image for William McDuff.
83 reviews
July 31, 2012
Read this back in university, and just hated it. I found it darn near impossible to follow, and never felt the magic of the text that others have found. For me, it was written obtusely for the sake of being obtuse and challenging. If you like books that are 'hard', might be up your alley, but I just ended up wishing for a tale that wasn't written by a narrator that was a madman.
188 reviews3 followers
August 10, 2020
I have read two other novels by Krostsch - "Gone Indian' and "What the Crow Said'. In my opinion both of thee novels are far superior to 'The Studhorse Man'. Both novels were written in the same post-modernist magical realism style as 'The Studhorse man' but in both of them teh characters although functioning in a fantastical context had a core of reality. These characters were depictions of real people with real motivations. Their actions had consequences that feel real to the reader, for me anyway. I felt this to be totally lacking in this novel and this was especially true of the female characters.

The novel uses the structure of 'The Odyssey' as a framework for its plot. As well, there is reference to the concept of the Trickster from indigenous American culture. I have only a superficial knowledge of teh contents of 'The Odyssey' and my knowledge of the Trickster is restricted to its name and a sense of its importance in its culture. I did spot some allusions to the Odyssey and I think I see the Trickster in some of the characters. I read the words 'dense lofty and complex ...' taken from a Globe and Mail review of the novel in the blurb on its back cover. This I think is the major problem for teh novel. It concentrates on allusions to teh detriment of teh reality and the effect of the characters. It appears to be a novel to be designed to be studied than a novel designed to be read and felt.

It is a novel for allusion hunting graduate students
Profile Image for Steven Buechler.
478 reviews14 followers
July 2, 2011
I regret discovering this book through the author's obituary. Normally stories like this become legends in other societies.

Pg. 15

"The gelding, glad for the rest, held the stallion. The reins and bit couldn't hold him; the scent of spring was in that yeasty wind, the high raw odor of mares and spring -
Already I find myself straying from the mere facts. I distort. I must control a certain penchant for gentleness and beauty. Hazard did not say "mares and spring." We were chatting together on the ranch where finally I caught up with him and he said in his crude way, "That raw bitch of a wind was full of crocuses and snatch."
47 reviews7 followers
Read
May 19, 2009
I read the first chapter. Closed it. Looked up at keila and said “I have no idea what I just read. Like actually” and then I started again. I know it’s stupid to say, but I don’t see the point of the book. I didn’t leave it feeling satisfied or happy or angry or anything. I wasn’t even confused at the end. I just felt like “oh, that was a book. It was pretty post modern”. It was interesting. Maybe I’ll read it again when it’s not for an exam and feel differently.
Profile Image for Nadine.
256 reviews
April 5, 2008
I hated this book so much that even giving it one star seems overly generous.
Profile Image for Frances.
11 reviews
July 7, 2021
Classic action packed storytelling with a focus on well developed characters and the believable unbelievable. This book doesn't play it safe with sex. I also thoroughly appreciated (what I found to be) a surprise ending.
Profile Image for Marie Gravelle.
66 reviews1 follower
April 18, 2022
I found this book sometimes funny, a little raucous, but I was usually bored. I read it because I had to - I usually love Can. Lit, but this didn't do it for me. The horse scene is not for me, but there was some sex at least!
Profile Image for Andrew.
6 reviews7 followers
January 20, 2020
Fantastic example of Prairie Postmodern literature.
Profile Image for Jerry Auld.
Author 5 books10 followers
October 31, 2012
Governor Generals winner from way back. Although I am a big fan of Robert's and I can see why he won this award, at times I found it wandered a bit or was unclear. The ending was strong and wrapped it all up, and the voice throughout was interesting. A book like this, with all the adventures and misadventures, makes me wonder how he thought up all of the diverse and extraordinary events. Having encountered his sense of humour I'm not at a loss, just in awe. I'd recommend this book strongly.
Profile Image for Caleigh.
540 reviews6 followers
February 3, 2012
Seriously weird. I slogged painfully through the first few chapters before getting sucked in rather against my will. The ending wasn't at all what I expected (not in a good way) but was funny nonetheless.
23 reviews2 followers
July 24, 2009
Absurd, hilarious, and written in the language of home.
Profile Image for Mortalform.
264 reviews4 followers
August 5, 2011
A fast read and a wonderful one. Can't believe I'd not heard of Robert Kroetsch before, yet another exceptional Canadian author. I look forward to reading the rest of his work.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
517 reviews10 followers
December 23, 2012
'The Studhorse Man' is full of classic postmodern tricks, like a more Albertan version of the 'The Crying of Lot 49'.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.