Rose George is the author of A Life Removed: Hunting for Refuge in the Modern World (long-listed for the Ulysses Reportage Prize), The Big Necessity: Adventures in the World of Human Waste (Portobello, 2008; shortlisted for the BMA Book Prize) and Deep Sea and Foreign Going: Inside Shipping, the Invisible Industry that Brings You 90% of Everything (Portobello, 2013; winner of a Mountbatten Maritime Award), and Nine Pints: A Journey Through the Mysterious, Miraculous World of Blood (Portobello, 2018; shortlisted for the LA Times Book Prize). Rose writes frequently for the Guardian, New Statesman and many other publications, and her two TED talks, on sanitation and seafaring, have had several million views. If she is not writing, she is probably up a hill, fell-running. http://rosegeorge.com/site/
An eye-widening and gulp-inducing read... George's deep affection and respect for her subjects - fishers and fish - make this a book full of nuance and heart, as well as outrage * Sunday Times * George has made a specialism of lifting the lid on forces that keep the world turning but we just don't notice... This brilliant, urgent book might be her most important yet * Radio Times * [George] presents her material with as much aplomb as a top chef presenting a grilled Dover sole... Honest, clear-sighted and recommendable * Literary Review * Rose George is a fearless and dogged reporter, one of our best... [She] writes with heart, heat, and wit... I've loved all Rose George's books, but I think I love this one most -- Mary Roach Every Last Fish, Rose George's exploration of commercial overfishing, is a reminder of how careless we are with our planet's vanishing bounty of underwater life. It's a warning of the consequences of such carelessness. But it's also a story of our beautiful and fascinating underwater worlds and of the sometimes unexpected ways we try not to destroy but to protect them... -- Deborah Blum * Pulitzer-Prize winning author of The Poison Squad: One Chemist's Single-Minded Quest for Food Safety at the Turn of the Twentieth Century * Once again Rose George, equipped with wide-ranging curiosity and bracing dashes of coruscating humor, takes us on an astoundingly eye-opening journey through the overlooked and everyday-this time the toll, in terms human and pelagic, of our consumption of fish -- Tom Vanderbilt * author of Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do and Beginners * It's hard to imagine creatures more different from us than fish. Yet as Rose George reminds us in this rollicking, often elegiac account, our fates are intertwined. Every Last Fish deftly captures our shared story through the humans: eccentric, passionate, and trepidatious -- Florence Williams * author of The Nature Fix: Why Being in Nature Makes us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative * Highly recommended for those interested in sustainable practices * Library Journal * The scope of George's book is broad, and many subjects are explored with her characteristic deftness, passion and wit * Times Literary Supplement * [A] wide-ranging, heartfelt, meticulously assembled account of our oceans... This is an important book, communicating its message as much through stories of ordinary fisherfolk as the devastating power of facts * Spectator *