""Intrepid conservation detective story.""
' Nature
""Vaquita is a lucid, informed, and gripping account of a species that will soon be lost in the absence of effective actions...Bessesen approaches the plight of the vaquita with the thoroughness and inquisitiveness of a scientist and the passion of an environmentalist. She has written a must-read for anyone keen to understand the realities of protecting biodiversity. In doing so, she fulfilled a promise she made to a small female vaquita that died from entanglement in a gillnet: 'I will tell your story...'""
' Science
""Passionate...a heartfelt and alarming tale.""
' Publishers Weekly
""Gripping...a well-told and moving tale of environmentalism and conservation.""
' Kirkus
""A compelling story surrounding yet another species imperiled by human activities.""
' Library Journal
""Well-researched, captivating.""
' Hakai Magazine's Newsletter
""Wonderful, heartbreaking...Vaquita is beautifully written.""
' The Nature Conservancy's Cool Green Science blog
""[Bessesen], with endless determination and at no small risk to herself, explored both the world of the porpoise and a web of greed and corruption as deadly as the gillnets that may be the last thing the last vaquita ever sees...If the heroes in this book do not inspire you, you have no heart: if the villainy does not infuriate you, you have no soul. That's how memorable this book is.""
' Matt's Sci/Tech blog
""If Rachel Carson had written a True Crime book, it might read like Brooke Bessesen's Vaquita. This fast-paced story of pirate fishermen, smugglers, killer cartels, dedicated scientists, whale warriors, and Navy dolphins is also a cautionary tale. It's no longer about saving the dolphins or the whales. It's about saving ourselves.""
' David Helvarg, author of ""The Golden Shore: California's Love Affair with the Sea""
""The story of the critically endangered vaquita desperately needs telling'and no one can tell it better than Brooke Bessesen. She writes with authority and heart of a conservation crisis that must be addressed now'lest we lose forever, on our watch, the world's smallest and most mysterious porpoise.""
' Sy Montgomery, National Book Award Finalist for ""Soul of an Octopus""
""The vaquita's story is a morality tale for the Anthropocene. How many species will we let slip to their extinction in full knowledge of what is happening, and with the means to prevent their loss so readily available? This beautifully written book serves as a warning that half-measures and compromises in conservation have terrible consequences; opportunities missed may be missed forever.""
' Callum Roberts, Professor of Marine Conservation, University of York, United Kingdom