THE LAST MAN IN NEW YORK
Episode #275 · Written by Paul MacNamara · Narrated by Scott Miller
New York awakens to silence when reporter Joe Dunn regains consciousness to find the city utterly frozen in time. As he searches for answers—and for another living soul—he discovers a secret behind the world’s vanishing that defies everything he thought he understood.
Joe Dunn thinks the most unusual part of his assignment is interviewing yet another end-of-the-world prophet tucked away in New Jersey. He expects a harmless crank and a mildly amusing newspaper column. What he doesn’t expect is a violent storm, a sudden blackout atop the RCA Building, and an awakening that changes everything he understands about the world.
When Joe regains consciousness, Manhattan is no longer the city he knows. The streets are empty. The subways are silent. The rivers no longer move. Clocks are frozen at the same instant, and the sun hangs unmoving in the sky as if the day itself has been nailed in place. New York stands intact yet lifeless—perfectly preserved, abandoned in mid-moment. Joe quickly realizes that humanity appears to be gone, and that he may be the last person left alive in a city designed for millions.
As he moves through this motionless metropolis, the story lingers on the strange intimacy of an empty world. Store windows remain carefully arranged. Meals sit untouched on tables. Luxury hotels and cramped apartments alike wait patiently for occupants who will never return. The silence is overwhelming, and the absence of even the smallest motion gives the city a museum-like stillness that feels both beautiful and unbearable.
Yet Joe is not entirely alone. Small, unsettling clues suggest another human presence: a shoe heel snapped from a woman’s slipper, a bottle shifted on a bar counter, a sign that someone else may be wandering the frozen city just out of reach. His search ultimately leads him to Julie Crosby, the photographer who accompanied him on that original assignment. Like Joe, Julie has survived the collapse of time itself, and their reunion brings both relief and new questions. Together, they face the unsettling truth that whatever has happened to the world was not random—and may not be permanent.
Their investigation leads back to Reverend Fletcher B. Fletcher, the mysterious prophet Joe dismissed too quickly, and to an explanation that stretches far beyond earthly disaster. What emerges is a startling vision of the universe as an immense system governed by cosmic administration, where worlds are closed, lives are tallied, and mistakes—however small—can leave entire planets hanging in limbo. The fate of Earth, it seems, may hinge not on judgment or catastrophe, but on an accounting error.
The Last Man in New York blends eerie stillness, dry humor, and speculative imagination into a story that is as thoughtful as it is unsettling. It explores loneliness without despair, wonder without sentimentality, and cosmic scale without losing sight of the human heart. Beneath its science-fiction premise lies a quiet meditation on connection, meaning, and how easily even the largest systems can overlook the smallest—and most important—details.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paul MacNamara is known today for a single science-fiction short story: The Last Man in New York. Beyond this work, little verifiable information about the author survives, leaving the story to stand on its own as a distinctive and memorable contribution to mid-century science fiction.
LISTEN TO THE STORY
Listen to The Last Man in New York by Paul MacNamara — a vintage sci-fi story about a silent New York, a vanished world, and one man searching for answers.
RELATED STORIES
📬 JOIN LOST SCI-FI WEEKLY
25,000+ Listeners Can’t Be Wrong
Get vintage sci-fi stories, podcast episodes, and surprises every Monday.
FREE SCI-FI EVERY WEEK
✅ Check your email and confirm — that unlocks your free sci-fi downloads.
No spam in this galaxy. You can eject anytime.