“This wonderfully wide-ranging and multifaceted volume offers a long overdue focus on the inter-species culture (felicitous phase) of dogs and people throughout the Pacific. It roams across geog-raphy and through archeology and anthropology to explore the rich lives of dogs alongside people in the Pacific lands. There is also fresh light and some deep thoughts about shared human–canine lives that will be interesting and useful for those interested in people and their dogs wherever they are found.” Clive Wynne, Arizona State University, Author of Dog Is Love: Why and How Your Dog Loves You“This groundbreaking book explores complex relationships between humans and dogs through the innovative lens of interspecies culture, illustrating how people and dogs culturally shape each other. Contributors illuminate worlds that dogs and people have built together—sometimes with affection, sometimes with ambivalence, sometimes through absence or with violence—but always in rela-tionship. This first comprehensive anthropological study of dogs across the Pacific is essential read-ing for multispecies researchers and all those who love dogs and want to know more about the in-numerable and fascinating ways our lives are entangled.” Yasmine Musharbash, Australian National University“Across Oceania dogs have held, and continue to hold, a diversity of culturally informed and envi-ronmentally influenced roles ranging from family members to food. Yet, anthropological forays into the complex interspecies relationships between Dogs and their Humans are rare. In this much an-ticipated volume, Lohmann brings together a diverse group of anthropologists to discuss the inter-twined lives of dogs and humans. The eloquently written and highly accessible case studies within are certain to appeal to researchers and dog lovers alike.”Justin Cramb, Assistant Professor of Archaeology, University of Alaska Fairbanks“Dogs and Their Humans in Pacific Island Interspecies Cultures is an important contribution to the burgeoning literature about human/canine relationships. Detailed case studies bring the myriad and complex ways our two species interact to light. Finely grained and nuanced observations and analyses of canine cultures (feral, stray, pampered companion, hunter, guard, food) and human cul-tures (classes, ethnicities, genders) show how dogs and humans shape each other while creating diverse human–canine interspecies cultures.” Bryan Cummins, Author of Our Debt to the Dog: How the Domestic Dog Helped Shape Human Societies