Advance praise for "The Last One"
"The Last One" seamlessly melds two of our contemporary obsessions the threat of global catastrophe and the staged drama of reality TV into a fiercely imagined tale of the human psyche under stress. This is an uncompromising, thought-provoking debut. Justin Cronin
Haunting, moving, and remarkable, Alexandra Oliva s debut novel is clever in its concept and gripping in its delivery. This propulsive book is for everyone who ever thought reality television signaled the end of the world. Karen Joy Fowler
Taut, tense, and at times almost unbearably real, "The Last One" is both a compelling read and a terrifyingly believable evocation of survival against the odds. Ruth Ware
Like "The Hunger Games, " Alexandra Oliva s novel is page-turning and deeply unsettling. Rosamund Lupton
Tense and gorgeous and so damn clever . . . I loved every second. Lauren Beukes
Part wilderness-survival thriller and part dystopian pandemic story . . . a gripping portrayal of an ordinary person s evolving survival instincts as she realizes she can t trust the reality she sees. " Booklist"
In her debut novel, Oliva has written a book that is clever in the best sense: she is able to skewer reality show culture and dystopian tropes while never letting concept or critique become more important than a good yarn. The novel is thoroughly steeped in its times . . . but unlike other dystopian novels, it doesn t so much use contemporary times to warn us about potential future collapse as it shows what impact our times have on the ways we think about identity and human relationships. An astute and compelling entry into the post-apocalypse genre. "Kirkus Reviews""
Praise for The Last One "[Alexandra] Oliva brilliantly scrutinizes the recorded (and heavily revised) narratives we believe, and the last one hundred pages will have the reader constantly guessing just what Zoo is capable of doing to find her way back home."
--Washington Post "Alexandra Oliva has written a debut novel that combines elements of reality TV with those of a post-apocalyptic world to create a tense atmosphere, filled with memorable characters who move through the game and surrounding world with varying levels of proficiency. . . . [She] also does an excellent job of portraying the psychological and emotional traumas that the contestants face. . . . For fans of
Survivor and
The Hunger Games, Oliva has melded the best of both worlds and added her own unusual twist."
--Shelf Awareness "Oliva takes this (possibly) post-apocalyptic setting, grafts on a knowledgeable skewering of the inner workings of reality television and gives us a gripping story of survival. . . . This is the genius of Oliva's storytelling. . . . [She] makes a stunning debut with this page turner, and becomes a writer to watch."
--Seattle Times "A high-concept, high-octane affair . . . The conceit is undoubtedly clever and . . . well executed, but what makes
The Last One such a page-turner is Zoo herself: practical, tough-minded and appealing."
--The Guardian "Alexandra Oliva delivers a pulse-pounding psychological tale of survival. . . . [She] masterfully manipulates her characters and the setting, creating a mash-up of popular TV genres:
Survivor meets The
Walking Dead."
--Bookpage "The TV show
Survivor meets Cormac McCarthy's
The Road in Oliva's stellar debut. . . . Fueled by brilliantly intimate and insightful writing as well as an endearing and fully realized female lead, this apocalyptic novel draws its power from Zoo's realizations about society and herself as she struggles to survive long enough to somehow make it back to her home."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Part wilderness-survival thriller and part dystopian pandemic story . . . a gripping portrayal of an ordinary person's evolving survival instincts as she realizes she can't trust the reality she sees."
--Booklist "In her debut novel, Oliva has written a book that is clever in the best sense: she is able to skewer reality show culture and dystopian tropes while never letting concept or critique become more important than a good yarn. The novel is thoroughly steeped in its times . . . but unlike other dystopian novels, it doesn't so much use contemporary times to warn us about potential future collapse as it shows what impact our times have on the ways we think about identity and human relationships. An astute and compelling entry into the post-apocalypse genre."
--Kirkus Reviews "
The Last One seamlessly melds two of our contemporary obsessions--the threat of global catastrophe and the staged drama of reality TV--into a fiercely imagined tale of the human psyche under stress. This is an uncompromising, thought-provoking debut."
--Justin Cronin "Haunting, moving, and remarkable, Alexandra Oliva's debut novel is clever in its concept and gripping in its delivery. This propulsive book is for everyone who ever thought reality television signaled the end of the world."
--Karen Joy Fowler "Taut, tense, and at times almost unbearably real,
The Last One is both a compelling read and a terrifyingly believable evocation of survival against the odds."
--Ruth Ware "Like
The Hunger Games, Alexandra Oliva's novel is page-turning and deeply unsettling."
--Rosamund Lupton "Tense and gorgeous and so damn clever . . . I loved every second."
--Lauren Beukes