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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9781563899447
ISBN: 1563899442
Label: DC Comics
Manufacturer: DC Comics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 144
Publication Date: June 01, 2003
Publisher: DC Comics
Release Date: June 01, 2003
Studio: DC Comics
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Average Rating: 
Rating:
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Nothing like seeming cool to a sixteen year old. I loved this series when I was a teen and was scared it wouldn't hold up over time. The return of Trigon and the battle of hearts, minds and souls of Raven and the Teen Titans is still a compelling read, and more of guilty pleasure because you don't have to wait a month between issues.
Perez and Wolfman created the best Titan storylines that haven't become completely hokey overtime. Buy it, borrow it, read it, share it.
Rating:
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Overall, I like the clever, crafty Marv Wolfman, the master of subterfuge and misdirection--the man who juggles multiple subplots while building severe tension throughout, oh, maybe twenty issues of a comic book. Marv Wolfman pulls tricks involving behind-the-scenes villains very well. Marv Wolfman likes to tantalize the reader with some new hidden menace lurking in the shadows, just as the one main storyline is wrapping up. He has often been so ambitious in his multi-issue plotting that he leaves ... Read More
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I've collected and read every story with the Teen Titans, New Titans, Team Titans, ect. but this story line is most felt by all Titans fans. The emotions felt by the characters is also felt by the readers...the art work is superb in itself. Plenty of times the world thought that the Titans were a knockoff of the X-men but they have proven time and time again that they are in a league of their own. Especially with this storyline with Trigon, a creature of almost limitless power, whos daughter is a member ... Read More
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Now, i read this collection some years ago, perhaps as many as four years ago, but every single time i re-read it, it is no less effective in its original goal, which was no doubt to bring a fresh, slightly skewed perspective to comic storytelling. More often than not, by mainstream America, comic books are seen as mere children's entertainment, as they've been viewed since their strange conception. This read was one of the very first(alongside Mr. Warren Ellis's works, Mr. Clarmont's tales, and Mr. Moore's ... Read More
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I just picked up my copy of this trade and reread it as I have countless times since the story's original run in the summer of 1984 prior to starting high school. As always, I was THOROUGHLY entertained! George Perez is the MASTER artist and it shows throughout the story. The high points of his art are the first two parts inked by himself and the staggering amount of detail he always throws in. Look at the "spires" twisting through the city and you'll know what I mean. I just wish he could've inked his ... Read More