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25+ Works 24,138 Members 461 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: at the New York Comic Convention in Manhattan, October 10, 2010. Photo by Luigi Novi.

Works by Jose Marzan

Y: The Last Man Vol. 01: Unmanned (2003) — Illustrator — 3,687 copies, 107 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 02: Cycles (2003) — Illustrator — 2,382 copies, 45 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 03: One Small Step (2004) — Illustrator — 2,109 copies, 36 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 04: Safeword (2004) — Illustrator — 1,950 copies, 26 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 05: Ring of Truth (2005) — Illustrator — 1,787 copies, 17 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 06: Girl on Girl (2005) — Illustrator — 1,705 copies, 20 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 07: Paper Dolls (2006) — Illustrator — 1,623 copies, 18 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 08: Kimono Dragons (2006) — Illustrator — 1,526 copies, 17 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 09: Motherland (2007) — Illustrator — 1,430 copies, 19 reviews
Y: The Last Man Vol. 10: Whys and Wherefores (2008) — Illustrator — 1,310 copies, 52 reviews
Y: The Last Man: The Deluxe Edition, Book 1 (2003) — Illustrator — 1,037 copies, 22 reviews
Y: The Last Man: The Deluxe Edition, Book 2 (2004) — Illustrator — 631 copies, 6 reviews
Y: The Last Man: The Deluxe Edition, Book 3 (2005) — Inker — 550 copies, 8 reviews
Y: The Last Man: The Deluxe Edition, Book 4 (2006) — Illustrator — 461 copies, 8 reviews
Y: The Last Man: The Deluxe Edition, Book 5 (2011) — Illustrator — 395 copies, 14 reviews
Jack of Fables Vol. 5: Turning Pages (2009) — Inker — 325 copies, 6 reviews
Jack of Fables Vol. 6: The Big Book of War (2009) — Illustrator — 291 copies, 5 reviews
Jack of Fables Vol. 7: The New Adventures of Jack and Jack (2010) — Inker — 237 copies, 7 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 2: Love Stories for Dead People (2009) — Illustrator — 195 copies, 5 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 3: The Space Between (2010) — Illustrator — 153 copies, 4 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 4: The Beauty of Decay (2010) — Illustrator — 116 copies, 5 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 5: Under New Management (2011) — Illustrator — 96 copies, 5 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 6: Safe as Houses (2011) — Illustrator — 76 copies, 3 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 8: Desolation (2012) — Illustrator — 54 copies, 4 reviews
Marvel's Voices: Heritage (2022) — Illustrator — 12 copies, 2 reviews

Associated Works

Fables, Vol. 13: The Great Fables Crossover (2010) — Inker — 831 copies, 44 reviews
Fables, Vol. 22: Farewell (2015) — Inker — 396 copies, 20 reviews
Fairest, Vol. 3: The Return of the Maharaja (2014) — Inker — 240 copies, 10 reviews
The Omega Men: The End Is Here (2016) — Illustrator — 149 copies, 8 reviews
Superman: Our Worlds at War (2006) — Illustrator — 67 copies, 4 reviews
House of Mystery, Vol. 7: Conception (2011) — Illustrator — 63 copies, 4 reviews
Superman: Infinite Crisis (2006) — Illustrator — 61 copies, 1 review
The Flash by Geoff Johns - Omnibus, Vol. 1 (2011) — Illustrator — 56 copies
The World of Flashpoint featuring The Flash (2012) — Illustrator — 53 copies, 3 reviews
DC One Million Omnibus (2013) — Illustrator — 41 copies
Enterprise Experiment (2008) — Illustrator — 33 copies, 2 reviews
Convergence: Infinite Earths Book One (2015) — Illustrator — 25 copies, 1 review
Convergence: Zero Hour Book One (2015) — Illustrator — 25 copies, 1 review
Legionnaires Book Two (2018) — Illustrator — 22 copies
Excalibur Omnibus Vol. 2 (2022) — Inker, some editions — 20 copies
Legion of Super-Heroes: Five Years Later Omnibus Vol. 2 (2022) — Illustrator — 18 copies, 1 review
Team 7, Volume 1: Fight Fire with Fire (2013) — Illustrator — 17 copies, 1 review
The Flash Omnibus 1 (2022) — Illustrator — 11 copies
The New 52: Futures End: Five Years Later Omnibus (2014) — Illustrator — 9 copies, 1 review

Tagged

2008 (106) adventure (170) apocalypse (297) Brian K. Vaughan (149) comic (676) comic book (161) comic books (235) comics (2,536) Comics & Graphic Novels (116) comix (84) DC (176) DC Comics (101) dystopia (476) dystopian (184) fables (157) fairy tales (144) fantasy (381) feminism (144) fiction (1,454) gender (252) goodreads (102) graphic (137) graphic novel (3,516) graphic novels (1,056) last man (93) library (157) own (99) owned (104) plague (191) post-apocalyptic (756) read (564) science fiction (1,756) series (397) sf (183) speculative fiction (119) to-read (497) tpb (93) Vertigo (780) Vertigo Comics (94) Y: The Last Man (464)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

I love this series! Excellently written and illustrated, the struggles Yorick has in the post apocalyptic world are things I never would have imagined. Great storytelling. It shows what I would describe as a realistic reaction to the apocalypse happening and being put in a crazy situation.
 
Flagged
illarai | 21 other reviews | Jun 26, 2024 |
Amazing anthology of Indigenous & Native authors and artists bringing much needed depth and understanding to Marvel’s many Native characters. Even without complete story arcs in this collection, it makes me want to find more on many of the characters I’d not seen before (a Native Werewolf by Night? I want more on this guy!).
 
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SESchend | 1 other review | Feb 2, 2024 |
 
Flagged
sweetimpact | 51 other reviews | Jan 18, 2024 |
(This is a review of the entire series!)
I was very excited about this graphic novel - a dystopian world in which all men but one mysteriously die? But I was hugely disappointed, as this isn't the feminist utopia I was looking for. It's anything but, and the fact that this title was written by a man should have warned me. It's very obviously a title written by men for men, as it's pretty much every man's fantasy to have a world of women at his disposal, isn't it?

Well, the comic cleverly tries to avoid such implications by making Yorick, the last man, a very sensitive, fairly unmasculine, English major. He doesn't take advantage of his situation at all, rather, he is on a 5-year quest around the world to find his girlfriend, who was in Australia when the men a died (while Yorick was in the US).

And that's where the comic started bothering me - we're presented with a post apocalyptic world in which society has broken down. No more phones, no more electricity, no more planes. I find it utterly unrealistic that a world full of women would be unable to maintain the basic functionalities of society. Of course there might be an adjustment phase, but after that, women would be perfectly capable of doing anything men can do. It just takes some organizational skills, which I daresay women are much better at than men.

The comic also displays it's dystopia full of gangs and criminality. Again, I find this very unrealistic. I don't think women would go quite as far as the ridiculous Daughters of the Amazon are going. The comic is full of similar fanatics, like the Israeli soldiers who want to claim the last man for the future of their country. Knowing what I know about Israel, I find this pretty unlikely.

The whole conclusion to why the wipeout happened was not very satisfying either, it was rather ridiculous. There would have been much better scenarios as to why all males suddenly died.

Allover, this title was a huge disappointment for me. Where is the feminist utopia in which women lead a better world?
… (more)
 
Flagged
adastra | 51 other reviews | Jan 15, 2024 |

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Statistics

Works
25
Also by
19
Members
24,138
Popularity
#867
Rating
4.0
Reviews
461
ISBNs
191
Languages
10

Charts & Graphs