Jumat, 06 Februari 2015

Download Ebook , by Brian K. Vaughan

Download Ebook , by Brian K. Vaughan

Currently, you might recognize well that this book is primarily recommended not just for the viewers who like this subject. This is likewise promoted for all individuals as well as public type culture. It will certainly not restrict you to read or otherwise the book. But, when you have begun or begun to review DDD, you will certainly understand why specifically guide will offer you al favorable things.

, by Brian K. Vaughan

, by Brian K. Vaughan


, by Brian K. Vaughan


Download Ebook , by Brian K. Vaughan

, By Brian K. Vaughan as a fantastic book will act not only the analysis material but also good friend for any kind of condition. A little mistake that some individuals could usually do is ignoring reading as a lazy activity to undergo. While if you know the benefits and breakthroughs of analysis, you will not underestimate anymore. But, there are still some people who really feel that so and also really feel that they do not need analysis in specific occasion.

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Never bother with the content, it will be the same. Perhaps, you could get more advantageous advantages of the methods you review guide in soft file forms. You know, envision that you will certainly bring the book anywhere. It's so heave. Why you don't take easy means by establishing the soft file in your gadget? It is so easy, isn't it? This is also one reason that makes many people prefer to choose this publication also in the soft file as their reading materials. So now are you thinking about?

, by Brian K. Vaughan

Product details

File Size: 51946 KB

Print Length: 128 pages

Publisher: Vertigo (November 21, 2011)

Publication Date: November 21, 2011

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B0064W66EC

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#10,111 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

In the future, the near future, a plaque strikes, killing every mammal with a Y chromosome, except Yorick Brown & his helper monkey, Ampersand. Filled with excellent characters and later chilling, edge of the seat story, Y the Last Man, is one of the best SF comics - ever. Don't delay, start reading it today!

This comic book reminded me a great deal of Stephen King's 'The Stand' as I read. That is a good thing! The plot twists kept me turning pages as well. The characters are not cute, but true to life. Women can definitely be as hard and crazy as men. If most men died from some strange event as they do in 'Y', women would certainly fill in the spaces left by the absences of males.However, the hostility directed against Yorick by so many vigilante women doesn't quite ring true. He doesn't know why he wasn't affected by whatever killed all of the men and neither does the government or his mother. I can't see any intelligent woman, much less his mother or the USA government, permitting him to roam about, traveling with a single bodyguard to try to reach Boston or Australia.However, 'Y' is definitely suspenseful. I have decided to stop judging the implausible bits for now. I am curious how the series will end. Since this is volume 1 of 10, obviously there are cliffhangers left. On to volume 2!

Authors have been writing stories about societies ruled by one gender (ok, mostly just ruled by women) for decades. In one of his earliest acclaimed works, Brian K. Vaughn devoted what seems to be a massive amount of time to this exact question.The titular 'Y' in this story is Yorrick Brown. An amateur magician and literary student, he is the only man (along with his pet monkey) to survive a mysterious plague that rapidly wipes out every other male of any species on the planet. He is far from the only character in this series however, as a good 3/4's of the plot is devoted to the female politicians, doctors, EMT's, and special forces that remain in the world. Needless to say, the wide depth of characters is easily the best aspect of this story.Dialogue is also a strength in this series. Vaughn can be both witty and emotive with his turns of phrase, and he has crammed in a boatload of statistics about women, the government, and all sorts of random trivia. This can occasionally become to obvious, but it's not a huge problem.The one weakness in this story is the monkey, Ampersand. He causes nothing but problems and should have, at the very least, been tossed into a cage a long time ago. Hopefully this comes under control in the next volume.

Y: The Last Man is a 10-volume graphic novel collection about what would happen if an unexplained plague wiped out every male on earth, animals and human alike, in a heartbeat. The premise of this story is that two males were inexplicably spared: a young man named Yorick Brown, amateur escape artist and generally something of a loser, and a capuchin monkey. The primary plotline is concerned with how to keep Yorick alive long enough to figure out just why he survived and whether that information can be used to help repopulate the earth, all while Yorick tries to find his girlfriend and would-be fiance, who was on a sabbatical in the Australian Outback when the disaster struck.In the process, Yorick and the people who help him encounter crazed "Amazons," who believe it is their duty to remove the last vestige of the male of the species from the planet, an out-of-control Israeli Defense Forces commander who wants Yorick for her own purposes, Yorick's mother, a Representative and one of the few members of the U.S. government left alive, Yorick's sister (with a few plot twists I won't reveal), and various others, some who try to aid him, many of whom try to kill him.The science in this set of graphic novels frankly doesn't make much sense, so you have to turn your brain off, much as you have to do when you read Superman. Some of the depictions of life without men make sense; some less so. There are plot twists galore and *everyone* has secrets, some of which aren't revealed until the final volume.I found the artwork in this series to be adequate but uninspiring. It reminded me a little of the old Curt Swan Superman and Legion of Super Heroes days. It's clean and uncluttered but this isn't artwork that's going to blow you away or that you'll want to show off to your friends. The real attraction to this series is the writing. To a certain extent, I think that's appropriate, as this doesn't have the grandeur and the scope of, say, the latest Avengers or Justice League space battle.The first volume of the series is a mixed bag. In it, we are introduced to Yorick, his girlfriend, his mother, his pet monkey, "Agent 355," assigned by his mother to guard Yorick, geneticist Allison Mann, Yorick's sister, Hero, and the Amazons. After the setup, we find Yorick out and about, hiding behind a gas mask so that no one will know that he's male, a wise precaution since the first woman who finds out about him tries to handcuff him so that she can sell him to the highest bidder.Yorick finds his way to his mother, who assigns Agent 355 to protect him as he makes his way to Boston to find Dr. Allison Mann, a geneticist whom they are hoping will be able to figure out why he's immune, and Yorick's sister, Hero (their father was a Shakespearean professor). They encounter several obstacles along the way but do find Dr. Mann, only to find her lab torched shortly thereafter, which requires a change in plans - a trip to California where she knows of an alternate lab.My biggest problem with this volume is that Yorick is kind of a loser, always acted on rather than doing the acting. Frankly, it's hard to feel much sympathy for him. In later volumes this changes, so it's worth sticking around, but if I had only read the first volume and didn't know anything about the later volumes, I'm not sure I'd have made it past this first one. It is worth doing so, though, and you need to get the setup in this one to make sense of the rest. I can definitely recommend the series more than I can the setup.

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