Skip to main content

Y: The Last Man: Even Spambots Cry After Reading It


Right off the bat, I'm going to say that Y is the saddest story I have ever taken in, with an emotional punch like a locomotive (or a bomb if you will). No work of fiction has ever destroyed me emotionally like this has. That being said, the story may be a tragedy, but gettin there was a lot of fun.
The story starts off with every male mammal on the face of the Earth being almost simultaneously wiped out by some kind of illness. With the exception of English major/escape artist Yorick Brown, and Ampersand, a capuchin monkey that he's volunteered to train to help people with disabilities. There's no apparent reason as to why they survived, they just did. At the time the plague hit, Yorick's girlfriend, whom he was about to propose to, was on a trip in Australia, while he was in Chicago. Naturally he sets out to find his true love. Along the way he picks up the companions 355, an agent of a secret government organization called the Culper Ring, and Dr. Allison Mann, one of the world's foremost authorities on human cloning.
Together they cross the country, and eventually the globe, trying to keep Yorick from becoming common knowledge, and thus the center of riots and wars, while they can figure out how he survived, synthesize it and/or clone him. They have mixed success with that first objective, as one of his earliest exploits brings him to the attention of a group that call themselves The Daughters of the Amazons, women who believe that the Gendercide (as it later becomes known) was god's way of purging the Earth of Man's wicked influence, they ritualistically burn/cut off their left breasts to emulate the Amazons of old, and are generally very scary extremists.
I don't want to go too much further into the story, because there's a lot of great things there, and I'd risk spoiling, and thus lessening the emotional impact of what happens.
I'm not sure why it is that this story hits so much harder than any other I've seen, I think movies just can't compare on account of their being too short for you to really bond with any of the characters, I read a lot less prose tragedies, so I don't know if it's necessary a medium there, or if I'm just underexposed. The bottom line is that I love the characters in this book, and I'm very sad that they're story is over.

Comments

  1. Such a great story, glad you read and enjoyed it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Man, welcome to the tragedy that is Y. I cried really really hard in the last 5 issues. Just about as hard as Walking Dead book 7. Another gut-punching series.

    I'd LOVE to see a television series done with Y. There's a whole bunch of story eluded to in the book, they they just didn't tell.

    Also, Pia Gurrera is one of my favorite artists, and has drawn Ampersand for me twice. ^__^

    -A1

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Boondock Saints 2: All Saints Day

This appears to be a time for disappointing sequels, although for awhile there, we got a lot of top tier extremely competent sequels. I guess no trend can be permanent. The first Boondock Saints was one of those rare creations that had just about the optimal amount of everything, it was balanced between being believable, ridiculous, funny, and brutal. Balanced is the last word I would use to describe the sequel. The dialogue is terrible, just about everyone in the movie talks like a middle school bully. There are honest to goodness slapstick comedy moments, such as a mafia liutenant getting smacked in the face with a salami, and then a follow up seen where he's forced to wear headgear and can't speak properly. The tone of the entire movie is just so very different from the original, that it feels like it was made with a different director/writer, with a different vision for what the movie should be. All the more sad, since it's the same writer/director, Troy Duffy,...

Prototype Status: Beat

For the longest time I was stuck on a ridiculous boss fight in Prototype, so I shelved it for a couple of weeks. Of course as is usually the case, I brought it out to show it to a friend, and tore through the boss like it was no big deal, so I finally beat the story over the weekend. A major complaint that I've had with the game, and indeed, many other action games as well, is that boss fights all require you to play the game in an entirely different way. In Prototype, you are typically the toughest thing out there, and you regularly square off against multiple opponents at the same time, while tearing them apart with brutal melee attacks. Then you get the boss fights, a number of which mostly involve you just running around, trying to get a heavy object to throw at them very hard. Becuse if you were to get within melee distant of them, they just use some attack that instantly stuns you. As I said, this seems to be a problem with most action games, not just Prototype. I was s...