The Last Man, Mary Shelley
The Last Man, Mary Shelley
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

The Last Man

Author: Mary Shelley

Narrator: Graham Dunlop

Unabridged: 6 hr 33 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/25/2026

Categories: Fiction, Classic, Dystopian


Synopsis

Mary Shelley wrote The Last Man in 1826, in the aftermath of losing her husband Percy, their children, and Byron. What emerged was the first modern apocalypse: a plague rises out of the late 21st century and, year by year, empties the earth of human life. Armies dissolve. Cities go silent. England is abandoned. A small remnant flees south through France and Switzerland, dying as they go, until one man stands alone in Rome — the last witness of his species.
Almost two hundred years before COVID, before nuclear dread, before climate collapse, Shelley imagined what extinction would actually feel like from the inside. This abridgement strips away the period scaffolding — the political subplots, the long parliamentary set-pieces — and keeps Shelley's central nerve: the slow, dignified, devastating account of a world ending and one consciousness left to record it.

About Mary Shelley

The daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft, the ardent feminist and author of A Vindication on the Right of Women, and William Goodwin, the radical-anarchist philosopher and author of Lives of the Necromancers, Mary Goodwin was born into a free-thinking, revolutionary household in London on August 30, 1797. Educated mainly by her intellectual surroundings, she had little formal schooling, and at age sixteen, she eloped with the young poet Percy Bysshe Shelly; they eventually married in 1816.

Mary Shelly's life had many tragic elements: her mother died giving birth to Mary; her half-sister committed suicide; Percy's wife Harriet Shelly drowned herself and her unborn child after he ran off with Mary; William Goodwin disowned Mary and Shelly after the elopement but, heavily in debt, recanted and came to them for money; Mary's first child died soon after its birth; and in 1822 Percy Shelly drowned in the Gulf of La Spezia—Mary was not quite twenty-five then.

Mary did not begin to write seriously until the summer of 1816, when she and Shelly were living in Switzerland, neighbors to Lord Byron. One night following a contest to compose ghost stories, Mary conceived her masterpiece, Frankenstein. After her husband's death, she continued to write, publishing Valperga, The Last Man, Ladore, and Faulkner between 1823 and 1837, in addition to editing Percy's works. In 1838 she began to work on his biography, but due to poor health she completed only a fragment.


Reviews

There are currently no user reviews for this audiobook.