Teen Titans: Raven
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
When a tragic accident takes the life of seventeen-year-old Raven Roth's foster mom--and Raven's memory--she moves to New Orleans to live with her foster mother's family and finish her senior year of high school. Starting over isn't easy. Raven remembers how to solve math equations and make pasta, but she can't remember her favorite song or who she was before the accident. When strange things start happening--impossible things--Raven starts to think it might be better not to know who she was in her previous life. But as she grows closer to her foster sister, Max, her new friends, and Tommy Torres, a guy who accepts her for who she is now, Raven has to decide if she's ready to face what's buried in the past...and the darkness building inside her. From the #1 New York Times bestselling co-author of Beautiful Creatures Kami Garcia, and artist Gabriel Picolo, comes this first graphic novel in the Teen Titans series for DC Ink, Teen Titans: Raven.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
After an accident kills her foster mother and leaves Raven with amnesia, she is sent to New Orleans to live with her foster mother's sister. There, she quickly bonds with her new foster sister and finds school friends while finishing her senior year. She also starts to have nightmares, hears the thoughts of people around her, and can seemingly cause bad things to happen just by thinking about them. Recovering her memories might explain these strange phenomena, but Raven isn't sure she wants to be the person she was before. Garcia (the Beautiful Creatures series) reframes Teen Titans comics character Raven as a young adult discovering her powers, focusing more on issues of identity and navigating teen social spaces than on superheroic battles (though this reboot has some of that, too). Picolo's spare, effective use of color and slightly edgy art helps situate the story in a supernaturally tinged world of high-school drama. Readers without prior knowledge of the character may be confused by the jumpy plot and vaguely developed characters, but Garcia's exploration of the connection between memory and identity offers a promising entr e to the Teen Titans series. Ages 13 up.
Customer Reviews
It’s Woke
Been a fan of this character since I was a child. They try and do a fresh take with the classic modern political woke movement and made her mother brown and unnecessary comments on homophobia. Worst of all the art style is just ugly to look at it, it’s a borderline war crime. And why completely ruin Angela’s origin story? It was always solid and this is just a insult to the source material.