"Trouble in the Camera Club is the story of a chubby, gay nerd coming of age during the first wave of Toronto Punk. It's a pictorial journey from the fall of poodle-haired, bell-bottomed bar bands to the rise of a kind of music that would punch those bands in their heads and then have unprotected sex with their girlfriends." -- VICE Magazine
"Any time you need a dose of the pre-irony, in it for the minute, bright and briefly burning world of early punk, step inside ... just mind the broken glass." -- Abort Magazine
"The sense of time flying in Don Pyle's Trouble in the Camera Club is dizzying. It's more like time sky diving without a parachute. The crash may be only seconds away, but the sensation in the moment is amazing." -- Toronto Star
"Pyle's archives make for a great 'snapshot' of the nascent days of one of the most significant eras in modern rock history." -- Antimusic
"Pyle documented the scene from 1976-1980 on his Canon AT-1 camera and caught everyone from Patti Smith to the Clash through his automatic 55mm lens." -- National Post
"Thanks to Don Pyle I am now able to vividly imagine what it must have been like to be a teenager growing up in Toronto during this incredible time. His book, Trouble in the Camera Club, documents both his personal experiences and musical adventures sneaking into Toronto fixtures like the Horseshoe and the El Mocambo from ages 14-18." -- Canada Arts Connect Magazine
"While the pictures [sic] tell a story all their own, they are accompanied by a personal narrative from Pyle about the Toronto punk scene he helped build.... Often the words that accompany photos in a photo book are a a throw away -- not in this book. The words tell a great story on their own." -- 410 Media