"Much of what [ George] shares will hit readers like a blast of shoreline wind. . . . humane and impressively researched." -- Kirkus "Highly recommended for those interested in sustainable practices." -- Catherine Lantz - Library Journal "Rose George is a fearless and dogged reporter, one of our best. Every Last Fish presents a shocking catch of fishing industry misdeeds: dredging and overfishing, fish-laundering, shipboard slavery. But to call this book an exposé overlooks its word-by-word charms. George writes with heart, heat, and wit. There are heroes here, too, and reasons for hope, and historical characters rendered as vividly as fish tank wrasse (Fishwives! Herring Girls! His Majestys Trawlers!). Ive loved all Rose Georges books, but I think I love this one most." -- Mary Roach, author of Replaceable You "From fish and chips to slavery at sea, cod-to-human skin grafts to the deadly toll of distant-water fisheries, Rose Georges new book is a penetrating and kaleidoscopic view of the natural worlds most exploited but least understood resource." -- Adam Higginbotham, author of Challenger "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 everydaythis time the toll, in terms human and pelagic, of our consumption of fish." -- Tom Vanderbilt, author of Traffic "Its 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 "Every Last Fish . . . is a reminder of how careless we are with our planets vanishing bounty of underwater life. Its a warning of the consequences of such carelessness. But its 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. In other words, as they say, a really good fish story." -- Deborah Blum, Pulitzer Prizewinning author of The Poison Squad