The Last Man cover

The Last Man

Mitch Rapp • Book 13

by Vince Flynn

Narrated by George Guidall

4.65 ABR Score (53.7K ratings)
★ 4.37 Goodreads (41.7K) ★ 4.67 Audible (12.0K)
11h 53m Released 2012 Thriller

Why Listen to This Audiobook?

George Guidall makes Mitch Rapp sound like a man who's stopped pretending the good guys are good.

  • Great if you want: spy thrillers where moral ambiguity drives the tension
  • Listening experience: tightly coiled and paranoid — trust nobody energy throughout
  • Narration: Guidall's gravelly intelligence elevates the murk and betrayal
  • Skip if: you prefer Rapp as a straightforward action hero

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About This Audiobook

Veteran operative Mitch Rapp finds himself deployed to the volatile landscape of Afghanistan when a high-ranking CIA official vanishes under suspicious circumstances. Joe Rickman, who has overseen the agency's most sensitive black operations in the region for nearly a decade, disappears after his security detail is found dead. What initially appears to be a straightforward kidnapping quickly reveals deeper complexities as Rapp discovers troubling inconsistencies about his former colleague's fate. With hundreds of millions in covert funding having flowed through Rickman's operations, multiple hostile forces converge on Afghanistan, each seeking to exploit the chaos for their own strategic advantage.

George Guidall delivers a masterful narration that captures both the intimate psychological tension and sweeping geopolitical intrigue of Flynn's thirteenth Mitch Rapp installment. His seasoned voice brings gravitas to the morally ambiguous world of international espionage, while his precise pacing maintains the story's relentless momentum across nearly twelve hours of runtime. Guidall's nuanced performance distinguishes between the various political players and regional factions without resorting to exaggerated accents, allowing listeners to remain fully immersed in Rapp's increasingly perilous mission. The audio format enhances the story's claustrophobic atmosphere as competing loyalties and hidden agendas unfold through Guidall's expertly controlled delivery.