Teen Titans

Scott Lobdell

Book - 2012

Vol. 1. Red Robin, Wonder Girl, Kid Flash, and the other Teen Titans investigate the mysterious organization N.O.W.H.E.R.E., who are capturing young metahumans and either corrupting or destroying them.

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COMIC/Teen/2011
vol. 1: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 3: 1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics COMIC/Teen/2011 v. 1 Checked In
2nd Floor Comics COMIC/Teen/2011 v. 3 Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Comics (Graphic works)
Published
New York : DC Comics c2012-
Language
English
Main Author
Scott Lobdell (-)
Other Authors
Brett Booth (illustrator)
Item Description
Statement of responsibility based on vol. 1.
Originally published in single magazine form in: TEEN TITANS 1-7 [v. 1] ; Teen Titans 8-14, DC Universe Presents 12 [v. 2] ; Teen Titans 0, 15-17, Red Hood and the Outlaws 16, Batman 17 (c2012) [v. 3] ; Teen Titans 18-23 [v. 4] ; Teen Titans 24-30, Ten Titans Annual 2-3 [v. 5]
"The new 52!"--Cover, <vol. 1- >
Physical Description
volumes : chiefly color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781401236984
9781401241032
9781401243210
9781401246242
9781401250539
  • v. 1. It's our right to fight
  • v. 2. The culling
  • v. 3. Death of the family
  • v. 4. Light and dark
  • v. 5. The trial of the flesh
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

It is always a challenge to start a series featuring a group of superheroes who didn't start out together, what with reintroducing the heroes, reacquainting the readers with backstory, and bringing the characters together piecemeal in order to confront their first bad guy. However, Lobdell (Superboy) and Booth (JLA) have produced a really engaging first act in this reboot of the Teen Titans franchise. This outing focuses on Tim Drake (aka Red Robin) and his efforts to gather a crack team of teenage meta-humans before the mysterious Project N.O.W.H.E.R.E. kills, incapacitates, or indoctrinates them. Whether it's Wonder Girl (don't call her Wonder Girl, by the way), Kid Flash, or even new characters like Bunker and Skitter, Lobdell and Booth combine to make their personalities compelling, their powers impressive, and their weaknesses and foibles interesting-all while treating the reader to some spectacularly energetic artwork, with eyeball-sizzling coloring by Andrew Dalhouse. Even if teenage angst mixed with superheroism isn't exactly your cup of tea, Lobdell and Booth have a way of moving the story forward both narratively and visually, and choosing some very cool "sets" for the principal action (the train, Red Robin's "perch," and the N.O.W.H.E.R.E. facility) making for a dynamic, engaging story. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved