Y: The Last Man Volume 7: Paper Dolls

   

Cover of Paper Dolls, volume 7 of Y: The Last Man

Review:

Will Yorick and Beth reunite at last? What's the origin story for Agent 355? How did Ampersand come by his plague-defying health? What happens when a naked Yorick gets splashed on the front page of a tabloid?

Brian K. Vaughan's absorbing and terrifying tale of Y: The Last Man continues in this 7th collection, with several shorter stories. Unfortunately they all suffer from overly contrived scenarios and melodrama, leaving this one of the weaker collections of the series.

The lead story sees Yorick, Agent 355 and Dr. Mann finally land in Australia! Yorick can begin in earnest his quest for his near-fiancée Beth. Except it is just a 24-hour refueling layover for the submarine that is transporting them. A very limited and fast search.

That passion, even anger, is what gets him off the boat. But with the passing of years since they last spoke, the trail has gone very cold. Still, he and 355 unearth more tantalizing clues, pointing them yet again to a location halfway around the world.

But they are also the hunted, this time by a tabloid hack journalist, out to find proof of a surviving male. And she will go to great lengths to get and then publish the story.

In this main story arc of the collection, author Brian K. Vaughan again displays great skill in pacing, relationships and ratcheting up tension. Yet this plotline leaves us less enthused than some of the others. Dr. Mann seems unusually gullible, 355 extra bloodthirsty, Yorick both headstrong and foolish. Which I guess is consistent with his character after all.

And the shooting of Yorick's mother feels gratuitous and unnecessary for the larger trajectory of this tale.

In a world of women, Pia Guerra has drawn lots of curves, lots of shapes and sizes, many hourglass figures, and strong female characters. Here for the first time, the story demands not just the occasional womanly breast or butt but full frontal male nudity. Guerra handles this and other artistic challenges with the usual skill and decorum. And the flashbacks and jumps between the past and present in the back stories is superbly handled, sepia-toned nostalgia, humorous or serious tones perfectly balanced throughout.

The three single-issue tales in this collection have their moments, but all  suffer from excessively contrived or outlandish plot elements. Perhaps in the greater context of the genocidal plague one can hardly imagine an excessively contrived plot twist, yet these stories have many.

First we return to the "Other Beth," following immediately on Yorick's failure to make progress locating his primary Beth in Australia. Hero, fulfilling her brother's request, delivers a note to Beth, only to discover that she is 8 months pregnant. It's a sweet story, with some deeper manipulation on the part of Yorick. But the motorcycle-riding nuns seeking the next immaculate conception swirl into this mix a strong dose of the sour and strange.

Strangeness also frames 355's back story. Hers is a powerful narrative, of loss and trauma, recovery, trust and betrayal. And it is well-told and stunningly drawn - a superb back-story for approximately 20 pages. But the ridiculous cannibal trope that frames it, while tangentially tying into a key moment of 355's past, still feels excessive and unnecessarily silly.

The collection ends with Ampersand's origin story. This humorous tale is a good finale for the collection, and leaves us dangling about what will come of this monkey, whose own escape-artist skills have wreaked such havoc in the lives of so many humans.

This is another enjoyable set of stories, although ones that suffer in comparison to the long run of amazing tales we've witnessed to date. The eye-rolling silliness of the cannibals and nuns lead me to only score this a still-respectable 3.5 capes out of 5.

Description:

In addition to catching up on the adventures of Yorick's monkey Ampersand (whose body holds the key to stopping the male-killing plague) and telling the origin of Agent 355, PAPER DOLLS chronicles Yorick and 355's search for Yorick's fiancée Beth in Australia—a search that yields a large dose of unwanted publicity for the Last Man, and deadly consequences for those he cares for! Collects issues #37-42 of the runaway hit Vertigo series by Brian K. Vaughan (EX-MACHINA, ASTONISHING X-MEN, RUNAWAYS) and Pia Guerra.

Collects: Y: The Last Man issues #37-42
Authors: Brian K. Vaughan
Artists: Pia Guerra (Illustrator), Jose Marzan
Published By: Vertigo 
Published When: May 1 2006
Parental Rating: Mature
ISBN-13: 9781401210090
Language: English
Pages: 144 pages

Ms. Marvel Volume 1: No Normal

   

Cover of Ms. Marvel volume 1 - No Normal

Review:

If you are enjoying the new Disney+ Ms. Marvel TV series, you definitely will want to check out the original source material, starting with the 2014 debut of Kamala Khan. This collection reprints the first 5 issues of her ongoing series. And they are an absolute joy and pleasure from cover to cover.

Kamala Khan, 16 yr old Muslim girl in an immigrant family, nerd-level affection for Avengers and especially Captain Marvel. Outsider in high school. Usual teen tensions with parental rules. Such is Kamala's life.

But what if such a person suddenly acquired super powers? Ones that came with no user guide or manual. No online video tutorials? Power that needed to be learned on-the-fly, that involved whole-body transformations and distortions? How would such a nerdy outsider immigrant teen girl handle such a change?

These first few issues drop us into all of these tensions and do an amazing job guiding us through her life, her friends, her temptations and challenges.

The zealously religious brother. The more socially religious but strict family. The mean-nice popular kids at school. The true friends. The characters are a bit prone to falling into one-dimensional caricatures, but author G. Willow Wilson handles them with such care and affection that by the end of the collection they are beginning to mesh into a comfortable ensemble.

Wilson also treats the Muslim faith of this ground-breaking Marvel hero with a deft and light balance of sensitivity and seriousness. It never gets in the way, but Wilson also refuses to shy away from occasionally expressing the tenets and philosophies, and does so with admirable honesty. Stereotypes of terrorists or refugees, so common in other portrayals of Muslims, are anathema here.

Artist Adrian Alphona does a superb job with the distortions of proportions required by Ms. Marvel's powers of polymorphism. From Kamala to Ms. Marvel to Kamala's mother, all blended together in a sequence of shape-shifting panels, yet the reader understands exactly what is happening. The stylistic exaggerations are frequent enough to stamp this with a distinctive visual style yet never detract from the tale.

This is a charming collection. It is a delight to read and look at, and all the major themes of the TV series - Kamala Khan discovering and growing into her powers, while wrestling with her struggles as a teenaged daughter of immigrants, and of being a perpetual outsider - were set in place from the first issue. A strong 4 capes out of 5.

Description:

Marvel Comics presents the all-new Ms. Marvel, the groundbreaking heroine that has become an international sensation! Kamala Khan is an ordinary girl from Jersey City - until she is suddenly empowered with extraordinary gifts. But who truly is the all-new Ms. Marvel? Teenager? Muslim? Inhuman? Find out as she takes the Marvel Universe by storm! As Kamala discovers the dangers of her newfound powers, she unlocks a secret behind them as well. Is Kamala ready to wield these immense new gifts? Or will the weight of the legacy before her be too much to handle? Kamala has no idea either. But she's comin' for you, New York! It's history in the making from acclaimed writer G. Willow Wilson (Air, Cairo) and beloved artist Adrian Alphona (Runaways)!

Collects: MS. MARVEL (2014) issues #1-5
Authors: 
Artists: 
Published By: Marvel 
Published When: Oct. 28 2014
Parental Rating: Teen
ISBN-10: 078519021X
ISBN-13: 978-0785190219
Language: English
Pages: 120 pages

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