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| Original Title: | Y: The Last Man Vol. 3: One Small Step |
| ISBN: | 1401202012 (ISBN13: 9781401202019) |
| Edition Language: | English URL http://www.dccomics.com/vertigo/graphic_novels/?gn=1735 |
| Series: | Y: The Last Man #3 |
| Setting: | United States of America |
Brian K. Vaughan
Paperback | Pages: 168 pages Rating: 4.21 | 29034 Users | 691 Reviews
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While I continue to enjoy this series, this volume was not quite as strong for me as the last two. It felt a bit disjointed and some of the plot twists too coincidental (I mean, it is quite an outlandish story, so I am not sure what I am expecting!) Some of that feeling may come from the last two issues compiled here having a different feel and different characters. So, to summarize, it is good, but feels slightly off.Another thing about this series as a whole is that I think the commentary on how women would survive without men must be tongue-in-cheek. If it isn't, then the author seems to be making it seem like women would struggle without men. But, I do think it is more likely a case of focusing on extreme response to more quickly get the point across in graphic novel format. Also, it may be that it is not so much that the women struggle without men, but is trying to show how important the sexes are to reach other.
I am hoping that this volume is just a lull in the series, a connector volume, perhaps, and it will improve again with the next volume.

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| Title | : | Y: The Last Man, Vol. 3: One Small Step (Y: The Last Man #3) |
| Author | : | Brian K. Vaughan |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | First Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 168 pages |
| Published | : | April 1st 2004 by Vertigo |
| Categories | : | Sequential Art. Graphic Novels. Comics. Science Fiction. Fiction. Graphic Novels Comics. Apocalyptic. Post Apocalyptic |
Rating Epithetical Books Y: The Last Man, Vol. 3: One Small Step (Y: The Last Man #3)
Ratings: 4.21 From 29034 Users | 691 ReviewsWrite-Up Epithetical Books Y: The Last Man, Vol. 3: One Small Step (Y: The Last Man #3)
So at the end of the last collection, we found out that (view spoiler)[Yorick may not be humanity's last hope after all; two men exist beyond the earth's atmosphere within the international space station (hide spoiler)]. Nothing like opening your review with a spoiler!In this installment, Vaughn pushes a subplot that has slowly been building since the beginning involving Israeli militant soldiers. Their eventual plan is to kidnap him and repopulate the homeland becoming the only nation on earthI'll do my best to keep this short, and recommend a quick browse of other comments for a gestalt assessment. Got this out of the library on the heels of a Washington Post Comics Riff blog reader's recommendation, but if Book 3 of 10 is any indication, I think I'll take a pass on the remainder.I give this book 2 1/2 stars for its high-concept (mysterious plague kills off EVERY Earth mammal with a Y chromosome except for maybe one guy and his pet capuchin monkey)......that suffers from cliched
still really enjoying this series.

I am just having so much fun with his series :)
Ampersand is my favorite thing about the series.
2.5 stars. Not much going on with this one after the great cliffhanger from Vol. 2. Yorick, 355, Dr. Mann, Ampersand (the monkey), and Natalya (a Russian woman on a mission to await the landing of the astronauts and take them back home) are on a road trip so they can safely bring the astronauts to an underground shelter. There are two men aboard the ship that have possibly escaped the plague that has killed off all the men on earth except for Yorick.While waiting for the astronauts to land, a
I want to like this series so much more than I do right now. There are some plot points that I thoroughly enjoy. I loved the idea that the male astronauts were safe from the epidemic in space, and I really like the transcontinental voyage that Yorick and company have set out on. But the central premise actually prevents me from liking this as much as I want to - or, more accurately, the way it's treated. (view spoiler)[In the last few pages of the book, the actors tell Yorick (in disguise, of

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