In the summer of 2002, an unknown "plague" destroys every mammal with a Y chromosome, killing every male man and animal on Earth and thus eliminating 48% of the global population, or approximately 2.9 billion men. Man, the population of the Earth was small back then. Today, that would be 3.79 billion men, not even 20 years later. Yep, this is one seriously overpopulated planet.
In the aftermath of this "plague", one man, Yorick, and his male monkey Ampersand, who he has been hopelessly trying to train as a helper monkey, have both somehow survived, and now, with a cast of characters that includes the mysterious and secretive federal agent known as Agent 355 and Dr. Mann, a scientist who may hold the key to figuring out why Yorick and Ampersand were the only male survivors, the band of main characters trudge their way through a man-less apocalypse in search of answers.
I actually liked this book a lot more than I thought I would. It's definitely dated, using insulting language at times and portraying every woman as one with a supermodel figure, things like that, but generally the story is funny and thought-provoking, and the bumbling Yorick and troublemaking Ampersand grew on me as the story progressed. I can't say I'm terribly invested in them, and I'd be sadder if Ampersand died than the main protagonist Yorick, because Yorick is kind of an insensitive moron, but I'm interested in reading the next installment to see where things go from here.
On the negative side, there are the dated aspects I mentioned, but I also took issue with some of the details of the story. It's mentioned that it's about two months since the male extinction at the time most of the story in this book takes place, and so why are there already crazy bands of women known as "amazons", each having removed one breast to match their historical equals from Greek mythology, who are totally insane and bent on the destruction of men? Wouldn't it take a lot longer than two months for so many women to go insane and form such a large, murderous cult?
Another thing I didn't like were some of the possible suggestions put forward by the book to answer the two most important questions raised by the entire series:
1. Why did all the men die in the first place? A really lame suggestion is put forth by Dr. Mann that she caused this extinction-level event, by a personal choice she made that could never, ever affect anything other than her own fate, in reality
2. Why did only Yorick and Ampersand survive? Another bizarre and lame theory is put forth by Yorick that this is because of a ring he bought at a magic shop and carries around his neck? Somehow that "protected" him and, presumably because he's in his vicinity, Ampersand as well?
I really hope these are not the real answers to these questions, because that would be ridiculous and would imply that in a world otherwise completely grounded in reality, as the world of this story seems to be, that there is "magic" going on and this is really a closet fantasy series. That would be incredibly unfortunate, and if the above explanations for such important questions are realized as truths in later volumes, I will actually go back into GR and give every book I've read in this series one star.
Another thing I didn't like involved a detail of the male extinction. It happens for all males, man and animal, worldwide, at exactly the same time. How could that possibly happen? It seems like a real stretch of logic. And with the amazons, why are they trying to go after and kill Yorick? Don't they realize, as a female-obsessed group, that without him they will be the last group of women ever to walk the Earth, and that civilization as we know it would end? It seems really idiotic of them to try to kill him, given that simple fact. You'd think they would swallow their pride and leave him alone, for the greater good of humanity...but I guess it's better to be the last women on Earth than to ever have men walk the Earth again? Anyway...that logic makes no sense to me.
As far as Y: The Last Man goes, for now, I'm enjoying the ride, and Ampersand is pretty cute (I have a soft spot for small, furry animals), so I'm looking forward to the next entry in the series to see where things go and what truths are revealed, though for the reasons I stated above, it's a journey I'm looking forward to cautiously, and with tempered expectations.
Recommended!