The Last Man

The Last Man by Mary Shelley is a landmark novel that invented the human extinction genre and initiated climate fiction. This edition, published by Penguin on April 9, 2024, spans 512 pages and is presented in English. Written during a period of personal and societal turmoil, the novel imagines a future ravaged by a pandemic, where the last survivor navigates a world reclaimed by nature and explores the emergence of new communities in the aftermath of disaster.
Readers will find that The Last Man delves into themes of political intrigue, love, and societal collapse, reflecting on the challenges of a post-apocalyptic existence. Shelley addresses issues such as climate change, imperial warfare, and economic instability, while also contemplating the potential for a more harmonious relationship between humanity and the natural world. This edition includes a foreword by Rebecca Solnit, adding contemporary context to Shelley’s exploration of a future shaped by environmental and political crises.
Official synopsis Publisher
Mary Shelley’s landmark novel that invented the human extinction genre and initiated climate fiction, imagining a world where newly-forged communities and reverence for nature rises from the ashes of a pandemic-ravaged society, now for the first time in Penguin Classics, with a foreword by Rebecca Solnit
A Penguin Classic
Written while Mary Shelley was in a self-imposed lockdown after the loss of her husband and children, and in the wake of intersecting crises including the climate-changing Mount Tambora eruption and a raging cholera outbreak, The Last Man (1826) is the first end-of-mankind novel, an early work of climate fiction, and a prophetic depiction of environmental change. Set in the late twenty-first century, the book tells of a deadly pandemic that leaves a lone survivor, and follows his journey through a post-apocalyptic world that’s devoid of humanity and reclaimed by nature. But rather than give in to despair, Shelley uses the now-ubiquitous end-times plot to imagine a new world where freshly-formed communities and alternative ways of being stand in for self-important politicians serving corrupt institutions, and where nature reigns mightily over humanity—a timely message for our current era of climate collapse and political upheaval. Brimming with political intrigue and love triangles around characters based on Percy Shelley and scandal-dogged poet Lord Byron, the novel also broaches partisan dysfunction, imperial warfare, refugee crises, and economic collapse—and brings the legacy of her radically progressive parents, William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft, to bear on present-day questions about making a better world less centered around “man.” Shelley’s second major novel after Frankenstein, The Last Man casts a half-skeptical eye on romantic ideals of utopian perfection and natural plenitude while looking ahead to a greener future in which our species develops new relationships with non-human life and the planet.
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