This is not a novel in the ordinary sense. It is a vision.
Written in 1930, Last and First Men presents the history of humanity across two billion years, told not through characters, but through civilizations - their rises, failures, mutations, extinctions, and rebirths. Stapledon imagines eighteen successive human species, each inheriting the ruins, dreams, and mistakes of those who came before. What begins as science fiction becomes something far stranger and deeper: a meditation on intelligence, ethics, collective identity, and the tragic beauty of finite civilizations. The book moves from Earth to the stars, from politics to metaphysics, from biology to philosophy, transforming the scale at which we think about human meaning. Few works have ever attempted so much. Fewer still have succeeded.
Last and First Men is a foundational text of speculative thought - a book that reshaped science fiction, influenced generations of writers and philosophers, and still feels unsettlingly modern in its questions about survival, progress, and the fate of consciousness itself.
This Sublime Books edition presents Stapledon’s masterpiece as it was always meant to be read: not as entertainment, but as an experience.