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The Last One Left

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Cover artist
  
Patricia Saville

Publication date
  
1967

ISBN
  
978-0-449-13958-5

Author
  
John D. MacDonald

Country
  
United States of America


Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Originally published
  
1967

Genre
  
Mystery

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Publishers
  
Fawcett Publications (p/b), Doubleday (h/b)

Similar
  
John D MacDonald books, Other books

The Last One Left (1966) is a mystery novel by John D. MacDonald. The story largely takes place in southern Florida and the Bahamas, and is similar to many of the author's Travis McGee stories. The book is in fact dedicated to McGee "who lent invaluable support and encouragement," and a named runabout motorboat later appears in the McGee novel Pale Gray for Guilt. The book's subtitle is A story about money and dying, and it is written on several different levels. Throughout the plot are subtle discourses on what it means to have a "good" life, how people deal with stress and uncertainty, and at what point will someone reach out for healthy human contact, or else take self-interest as their highest goal.

It was originally published in 1967, appearing in paperback by Fawcett (reprinted 1981) and in hardcover by Doubleday.

Plot summary

A yacht explodes in the Bahamas, apparently killing six people and leaving its burned captain temporarily marooned on a small island. Sam Boyleston, an attorney from Texas and the brother of one of the victims, investigates the circumstances, as does Raoul Kelly, a newspaper reporter. As the plot develops it becomes apparent that one person is ruthlessly manipulating events, but proving guilt appears impossible.

From internal evidence the action occurs in late May and early June, circa 1965 (the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion is mentioned but the Bahamian dollar, introduced in 1966, is not yet in circulation).

The plot is similar to the notorious real-life events on the sailing ship Bluebelle 1961, when the captain killed his wife and four passengers and set a surviving child adrift to die, all in an unsuccessful attempt to cash in his wife's life insurance policy.

References

The Last One Left Wikipedia