"The stories included throughout are poignant …. Thorough and vivid, Flames of Extinction is an amazing resource that allows you to see a poignant examination of the wildfires and the race to save the wildlife."
Seattle Book Review
"Taken altogether these stories describe an unprecedented human response to unarguably Australia’s worst ever environmental catastrophe. The volume addresses, in astonishing detail, the destructive environmental outcomes delivered upon a continent in flames…. The author focuses on 11 exemplar stories, each supported by an extraordinary amount of factual detail, interviews with participants, and underpinned by the best ecological science."
Quarterly Review of Biology
"Although Pickrell's focus is on [the 2020] season's events, his reporting embraces themes of wildlife rehabilitation, fire dangers and protection efforts, and how to survive a changing climate as the future portends further global warming and more extreme fires....These experiences and lessons read with the drama of "you are here" fiction, but incorporate all the dilemmas and approaches of what really happened, making for a survey accessible to general readers and wildlife management professionals alike."
Donovan's Literary Services
"Rich, well-documented resource on the impacts of Australian wildfires with relevance to the North American context, a must read primer to inform the climate change debate in a highly readable form.".
Choice
"This book, though an emotional read, is an important look at what is happening to our climate and a call to action."
Wildlife Activist
"Flames of Extinction … is a powerful and disturbing description of the impact of Australia’s Black Summer bushfires on the country’s fauna and flora…. It is through Pickrell’s interwoven accounts of the professionals and communities fighting to protect a selection of Australia’s iconic animals––marsupials, birds, and trees––that the desperate statistics and imagery of the Black Summer nightmare are brought to life."
Conservation Biology
"Pickrell is a talented writer who presents his findings in an accessible and engaging style. He does an admirable balancing act of recounting heart-rending loss, miraculous survival, and heroic rescue. The book easily could have been unremittingly depressing—after all, experts estimate that 3 billion larger animals may have perished during the fires. Upon finishing the book, though, the reader is left with a sense of hope and an appreciation for the valor and dogged persistence of firefighters, wildlife rehabilitators, and restoration practitioners."
Natural Areas Journal
"Pickrell tells a series of deep and compelling stories of resilience and recovery, finding hope amid the ashes of the most disastrous bushfires in modern history. Through detailed research and vivid storytelling, he puts a face on the otherwise impossible-to-comprehend abstraction of three billion animal deaths. In each tale of these plants and animals’ fight to survive, he also provides a map for humanity in our own endeavor to learn to live with an increasingly fiery planet."
Michael Kodas, author of "Megafire" and "High Crimes"
"A carefully researched and deeply empathetic portrayal of the battle to save Australia’s precious wildlife as we cook our planet. Fascinating and essential."
Gaia Vince, author of "Adventures in the Anthropocene"
"The story of Australia’s devastating holocaust and how we must stop it happening again. It’s up to us."
Robyn Williams, host of Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s "Science Show" and "Ockham’s Razor"
"Powerful and compelling, Flames of Extinction should be read by all who cherish life on Earth."
Professor Chris Dickman, University of Sydney