Y: The Last Man Vol. 3: One Small Step
Y: The Last Man Vol. 3: One Small Step book cover

Y: The Last Man Vol. 3: One Small Step

Paperback – April 1, 2004

Price
$12.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
168
Publisher
Vertigo
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1401202019
Dimensions
6.65 x 0.47 x 10.16 inches
Weight
8.6 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly In this addictive follow-up to the brilliantly imagined Y: The Last Man , we're still in the near future and Yorick Brown and his monkey sidekick, Ampersand, are still the last two males on Earth. It's been some months since the mysterious plague that wiped out all male creatures. Since then, women have been picking up the pieces. A mysterious government agency, the Culper Ring, is trying to get Yorick across the country for scientific study without being discovered, which isn't as easy as it sounds, but at least the growing drag king subculture makes it possible for people who look like men to walk around without exciting too much comment. Meanwhile, an Israeli strike team is trying to capture Yorick for its own uses, and the U.S. president is colluding with them. Most suspenseful of all, a space station carrying two surviving male astronauts is about to crash down in a Kansas cornfield. The stakes are high, and Vaughan masterfully interweaves story lines: the astronauts' survival, the military operations, an enemy spy, the valiant scientists and an unexpected travelling drama troupe that offends an entire town when it puts on a play in which the world is saved by a lone surviving man. Meanwhile, is Yorick falling in love with his bodyguard? Guerra knows just what the story needs, backing up Vaughan's tale with killer artwork and a smorgasbord of female heroines who look terrific without the least suggestion of cheesecake. This book is complete and utter comic gold. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist The last panel of Cycles [BKL N 15 03] revealed that, although Yorick Brown is the last man alive on Earth, two other live men are on a space station. Their return to terra firma would take some heat off Yorick, who, in the third Y: The Last Man collection, remains in the custody of secret U.S. agent 355 while Israeli commandos pursue him. He, 355, and cloning scientist Allison Mann head for the decontamination facility near which the astronauts intend to land. They are joined en route--near-fatally for 355-- by a Russian agent, who comes in handy when the Israelis show up and snatch Yorick. Only after negotiations, ammo exchanges, and Yorick's own heroics does 355 re-take him. This hunk of Yorick's odyssey ends with a surprise as nasty as the Cycles surprise was hopeful. A pendant featuring Yorick's pet monkey, Ampersand, and a peripatetic theatrical company fill out the volume; drawn by a different, slightly more polished artist than the main story's Pia Guerra, it is every bit as well written by Vaughan. Ray Olson Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Features & Highlights

  • WINNER OF THREE EISNER AWARDS
  • The adventures of Yorick Brown continue in Y: THE LAST MAN: ONE SMALL STEP, collecting issues #11-17 of the critically acclaimed series. A Russian Soyuz capsule is coming down from the International Space Station carrying three passengers: one woman and two men. Could this be the end of Yorick's tenure as last living male?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(157)
★★★★
25%
(65)
★★★
15%
(39)
★★
7%
(18)
-7%
(-18)

Most Helpful Reviews

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No drop-off in quality from the first two volumes

"One Small Step," the third volume of Y: The Last Man loses no momentum from the previous two volumes, "Unmanned" and "Cycles." In fact, I'd say it picks up steam. Now that I've become accustomed to the characters, I care more about them and find their perilous adventures more gripping than ever.
"One Small Step" contains two stories, the primary one being the title story. Yorick, Agent 355 and Dr. Mann travel through Missouri to Kansas and seek to help two more potential male survivors of the plaque to arrive safely on Earth from orbit. All males of all species on Earth died in the plague, but it didn't extend to those males OFF the planet. The International Space Station houses two male and one female astronaut, all of whom are dangerously close to suffocating in the failing life support of the station. They have to evacuate the station and find out whether they can survive now that several months have gone by since the plague.
Thrown into the mix are the Israeli soldiers, led by their stoic Colonel, whose motives have been unclear until this story. Suffice it to say that old scores die hard.
Brian Vaughn builds the tension slowly with several events threatening to collide explosively. The violent colonel, an endangered Yorick, and the fate of the astronauts all hangs in the balance. I found myself flying through the climactic pages of this story, eager to find out what was going to happen.
You really have to read the first two volumes before you move on to this one. There's too much back story you'll miss. But it's worth the time. This is one of the best comics to come out in the past several years and is not to be missed!
17 people found this helpful
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Longer Book For The Same Price, But Series Slows

This book collects issues 11 to 17 of the series, offering seven issues for the same price as the first two five-issue volumes. Unfortunately, the plot moves slower than before, including a guest-penciled two-issue 'Comedy and Tragedy' sidebar about a traveling theater troupe in a small Nebraska town. I'll hope for an improvement in the simulaneously purchased Book 4 before continuing with Book 5.
3 people found this helpful
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One of the best comic series ever!!

This isn't a review of this book, but rather a review of the whole series up till this point. I started reading this series without knowing much about it. I must say that this is one of the best things I have ever read! The pacing is perfect, every character is interesting and well-written, and there is a ton of jokes that quite often have me laughing out loud. They also make lot's of references to movies and comics like "preacher" and "the outsiders" for god's sakes! The only downside to this series is that I now have to wait for the 4th book. This rates up there with "Preacher" and "Akira". Do yourself a favor and buy all the books immediately!
3 people found this helpful
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"One Small Step" B+ / "Comedy and Tragedy" C-

This trade paperback is really made up of two different stories. The first one, "One Small Step," is a continuation of some of the plot lines that began in Volume Two. As the three cosmonauts who were not on Earth when the plague hit, two of them male, prepare to land, a tip from a misguided woman lead the militant villain Alter to Yorick. There are many different plots at work here, and they're all interesting, but none of them were as gripping as the plot lines of Volume Two (the women of Marrisville, the face-off with the Amazons, Yorick realizing what his sister has become).

"One Small Step" was a good enough story, though what followed wasn't even close. Volume Three concludes with a two issue story arc called "Comedy and Tragedy" that strays away from the main plot of the series, shifting focus to a troupe of actors who are putting on a play about how women would react to the last man on Earth. Yorick, 355, and Dr. Mann only make a brief appearance in the last pages of the concluding issue. Brian K. Vaughan is a great writer, so these two issues were quite readable, but they strayed too far away from the central story. These new characters weren't even likable in the least. I don't know what possessed Vaughan to do this, but I'll be glad to see Yorick back as the central character in the next volume.

7/10
2 people found this helpful
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Continuing the saga of the new age Omega Man

As One Small Step, the third collected volume of Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra's compulsively addictive series from Vertigo, opens up, we now know that Yorick may indeed be the last living male mammal on the planet, but there are two male astronauts in orbit, and they're ready to come back home. Everything that happens between all this sets the stage for the future as Yorick, Agent 355, and Dr. Mann make try to make their way to them, but not before others cross their path with their own intentions. Despite the moments of lag here and there, One Small Step is still exceptional comic reading from the best ongoing series to come out of Vertigo since Garth Ennis' Preacher; and speaking of which, the in-joke in the beginning of this TPB will leave you having a good laugh.
2 people found this helpful
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Brillant series

First off, please please don't pay any attention to the "Sexist..." review. The reviewer clearly hasn't read much of the series. The "amazons shooting arrows" thing clearly shows that the she didn't read enough to actually know that that was just one comment from a clueless character, not a fully story explaination for the significant story arc.

This story is an amazing, smart, powerful look at what might happen when more than half of the world's population disappears in the blink of an eye. Like it or not, a vast majority of the world's technical professions are dominated by men.

Would it take a less than a month to clear away all the dead bodies from the freeways? To fire the oil refineries and distribution networks back up? To get over an emotional loss that effects ever person (woman in this case) on the planet, bar none? Yeah, I think so.

Anyway, sorry for the ramble, but had to make sure that the 1 star was fully discredited.

This comic series is a brillant, fun, mind-bending, though-provoking series unlike anything I've ever seen or read before in any medium. The visual story telling of the comic medium is absolutely perfect for this story. The multiple story arcs are fascinating.

If you're not reading this series already, run, don't walk to the store or the Amazon checkout page to start this series. You WILL NOT be disappointed. I've read the books cover to cover twice since getting them a month ago, and have already read the comics (that I pick up every month like clockwork) start to finish no less than 5 times.

Great great stuff.
2 people found this helpful
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Review of Y:LM, Volume 3

Another strong volume by Vaughn. There is less inventive atmosphere and more development of character in this volume. There is a notable uprise in puns within this volume--occasionally annoying.
1 people found this helpful
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one of the greatest stories in comics

I was turned on to Y The Last Man at work when I saw someone with the comic. I asked him what it was about and he told me. Being a fan of post-apocolyptica, I asked if it was any good. He looked straight into my eyes and said, "I don't read crap, man." If you looked at the guy, a stereotypical comic book/gaming nerd, you could tell he knew his stuff.

I went home and bought all the available graphic novels, 6 at the time. I have no regrets. I have since lent these novels to about a dozen people and they all loved it.

This comic perfectly blends action, comedy, sci-fi, romance, and drama together to create a world where women rule.
1 people found this helpful
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Good stuff

Each TPB I read leaves me wanting more. I can't wait for the next one. Interesting story, good art, funny and my girlfriend likes reading them too!
1 people found this helpful
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Got exactly what i ordered

I got exactly what I ordered. It’s was used but in good condition. Came packaged good. Came on time. Great addition to my collection- it was one of the last ones i needed for the book series.