<b>Superb dialogue, vivid imagination and wry humour</b> . . . <i>The Last Gasp</i> is <b>a landmark in the field of eco-fiction</b>
Washington Post
This <b>terrifying vision</b> of the possible near future convincingly shows how drastically things could change in a single generation. <b>A riveting ecological thriller that will have you sighing with relief that it all isn't true - yet</b>
Publisher's Weekly
Trevor Hoyle has <b>combined <i>Dr Strangelove</i> and <i>Raiders of the Lost Ark</i></b> and come up with a formula that works like a <b>poisoned charm</b>
New York Daily News
The author's <b>deftness with character, plot and the conventions of the thriller form</b> is vital to a book of this length and complexity. It <b>maintains narrative momentum</b> and encourages the reader to get to grips with <b>the science behind the story</b>
The Morning Star
If someone had told me I'd find a 722 page novel about <b>climate change</b> and pollution <b>as engrossing as a James Bond novel</b>, I'd have thought they were mad. However Trevor Hoyle's The Last Gasp does just that
Horror Hot House
<i>The Last Gasp</i> by Trevor Hoyle is <b>my risk analysis disaster science fiction book standard of excellence . . . </b><b>B</b>izarre and intriguing events, catastrophic consequences, and solutions . . . <b>Engaging.</b>
Michael R Greenberg, Explaining Risk Analysis
<b>The book is epic</b> . . . At 700 pages it's a mighty tome - and the science, may leave the reader, also <b>gasping for breath.</b>
Starburst Magazine
A prophet of ecological apocalypse and chronicler of imminent chaos . . . <b>an enormously entertaining book</b>
Morning Star
<i>The Last Gasp</i> is an<b> immersive apocalyptic science fiction horror thriller</b> that is next to<b> impossible to put down</b>
A Bookish Blog
Climate thrillers, let alone good ones, are few and far between ... That's why <i>The Last Gasp</i><b> is a minor revelation</b>
SciFiNow
TIME IS SHORT.
THE AIR IS RUNNING OUT.
Selected as one of Goodread's Best Ecological Horror novels
Scientists have been warning for decades that we are poisoning the Earth. Now their prophecy is coming true. The oceans have become polluted, destroying a crucial link in the planet's life-support system.
Instead of joining in friendship to meet this deadly future, corrupt superpowers are plotting to secure the last remaining clean air for the privileged few.
This is the terrifying 21st-century prophecy of what we are doing to our home in space.
Once it was just a scary bedtime story. Now it has become horrifyingly real.