Product Details
The Titans Companion

The Titans Companion
By Glen Cadigan, George Perez, Nick Cardy

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Product Description

Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the New Teen Titans is The Titans Companion, a comprehensive look back at the best-selling DC series! The history of the definite teen team is covered through a series of interviews with fan-favorite creators Marv Wolfman, George Pérez, José Luis García-López, Len Wein, and others! Also included is a comprehensive Silver Age section featuring interviews with Neal Adams, Nick Cardy, Dick Giordano, and more! Plus: Chris Claremont and Walter Simonson on the X-Men/New Teen Titans crossover! Tom Grummett, Phil Jimenez and Terry Dodson on their '90s Titans work! Rare and unpublished artwork by Cardy, Pérez, García-López, Grummett, Jimenez, and others! Featuring an all-new cover by Phil Jimenez and an introduction by Geoff Johns, The Titans Companion is a must-have for any Titans fan!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1011578 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-12-07
  • Released on: 2005-11-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
The New Teen Titans was DC's big hit of the 1980s, one of few that rivaled the popularity of Marvel's X-Men. It had a progenitor in the 1960s Teen Titans, about a team of grown-up superheroes' adolescent sidekicks, which was most notable for its middle-aged writer's embarrassing attempts at "hip" dialogue. In 1980 writer Marv Wolfman revived the concept with a slightly older cast, retaining Robin and Wonder Girl but creating the team's other members out of whole cloth. Drawn by fan-favorite George Perez, NTT was an immediate smash but sputtered creatively and commercially when Perez and then Wolfman departed a few years later. DC has recently launched another Titans update, and an anime-style version of the '80s team is a hit on the Cartoon Network. But it's the Wolfman-Perez series that makes longtime fans' hearts beat faster and that is the focus of Cadigan's retrospective made up of interviews with virtually every writer and artist who handled the Titans' various incarnations, and artwork, much of it previously unpublished, on every page. Gordon Flagg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Customer Reviews

If you're not already one, this'll turn you into a Titans fan!5
The Titans Companion is a great source of information for fans of the world's greatest teen super-group. It's formatted with dozens of interviews with just about everybody who's ever worked on Teen Titans, The New Teen Titans, Tales of the Teen Titans, New Titans, Team Titans, and whatever other incarnation the teams had. Cadigan has taken the liberty of breaking up certain interviews (Wolfman and Perez come to mind) chronologically, which allows you take in the Titans one era at a time. Reading from start to finish, it's amazing to witness the transformation from a team of four sidekicks trying to bridge the generation gaps to a horde of dysfunctional, de-aged, gritty warriors.

If you're hoping for a comic-by-comic guide of what happened with the team, stick to the internet. I was able to piece most of it together, but there were bits and pieces I needed some more help on.

The book has TONS of b&w artwork, either reproduced panels or convention sketches--they're fantastic!

As somebody who's never read much DC at all, let alone Titans, I learned that Wondergirl was originally just Wonderwoman at a younger age (ie, not Wonderwoman's sidekick). When she showed up in Teen Titans, all of a sudden an origin had to follow, and it's followed poor Donna Troy ever since! Deathstroke the Terminator, and Vigilante both sprung from the pages of New Teen Titans. Speedy's little heroin addiction apparently never came up in the Titans! And that there were a lot of character's I'd never heard of who've joined the Titans over the years, including the Joker's daughter, who was actually Two-Face's daughter, who called herself Duella Dent and fought as Harlequin (not the Batman:The Animated Series one), and who according to Len Wein in a lettercol of DC's Who's Who #15 "show's up at Donna Troy's wedding and Dick Grayson accusing (sic) her of lying. She admitted to the deception and points to her recent addition of 50 pounds, keeping her out of crime-fighting. Since she was never a major character, nor did she ever have her own series or origin, it was decided to omit her reference (from Who's Who) since she will not be seen again."

Suffice it to say, I'm now dying to find a Titans issue with Duella as an active crimefighter in it, to see how the writer's played it. There's a lot of examples like this, where I felt like I was at a a MENSA party or something. I was mingling, meeting people, and listening to fascinating conversations, the whole time thinking "man, I've *got* to find out more about this!"

-Tom



A great read, especially with Infinite Crisis going on now!5

I picked up this book on a lark, having recently discovered TwoMorrows Publishing and quickly becoming a great fan of the company.

I grew up reading mostly Marvel comics in the 80's, with the exception of maybe a Batman here or there. Over the years, I've caught up on a few of DC's bigger events through some trades, but I'm no expert in DC continuity. The only Teen Titans I'd ever read was "the Judas Contract".

This book takes the reader chronologically through the evolution of the Teen Titans, from the time when it was basically "the Justice League's sidekicks" to it's present day incarnation. We take this journey via interviews with or articles on just about every creator involved with Titans. Every page has great artwork, and most of it is previously unpublished commissions to fans (a TwoMorrows hallmark).

While I think the book is designed for somebody who's a Teen Titans fanatic, it was detailed enough that I could follow along, and most of the plot points were articulated well-enough in the interviews that I didn't have to have read every issue of Teen Titans. That said, there were some moments when I scratched my head and thought "what's a baxter-series?" or something like that? Most of these were quickly rememedied with google or yahoo's help. In fact, here's my recommendation: Do an online search of Teen Titans, and read through the issue summaries--yup, they're out there. If it sounds interesting to you at all, pick up the book. That should be enough info that you're never left scratching your head, and it's also a good litmus test of your Titans fever. I know I've already started plunging through the quarter bins for the wolfman/perez stuff that hasn't been collected in trades yet!

A great book that any comic fan will love!

Very highly recommended reading for all Teen Titan fans5
Celebrating the 25th anniversary of the popular New Teen Titans DC comic book series, Titans Companion is an engaging survey of the history of the series through interviews with creators Marv Wolfman, George Perez, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Len Wein, Eduardo Barreto, and other fan favorites. A comprehensive Silver Age section also has interviews with Neal Adams, Nick Cardy, Dick Giordano, among others. Illustrated with black-and-white comic panels and rare character sketches, Titans Companion is a "must-have" for fans of the series, or anyone interested in a behind-the-scenes look at creative decisions in the comic book industry (such as choosing to dress Nightwing, formerly Robin, in dark colors to make him less of a target but exposing some of his chest to appeal to female fans, now that his legs are covered). Very highly recommended reading for all Teen Titan fans.