Read Raven’s Origin Story in Teen Titans: Raven

Image is a photo of a graphic novel book cover for Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo's graphic novel, Teen Titans Raven. It shows a woman's side portfolio as she's looking ahead. She has a purple bob with noise cancelling head phones on her head.

In 2003, I was in third grade and playing pretend games with one of my friends who lived in a neighborhood over. We would pretend to play Teen Titans. She would be Starfire, so she could be dating Robin while I was relegated to being Raven. We ran around her yard pretending to defeat supervillains. Teen Titans will always hold a special place in my fandom heart. When I heard about a Raven young adult graphic novel being released by Kami Garcia and illustrated by Gabriel Picolo, I knew I had to read it. Teen Titans: Raven was a refreshing take on Raven’s origin story.

Raven is driving with her foster mom when they are involved in a deadly car accident. Raven lives without her memory while her foster mom is taken to the morgue. Raven is sent to live with her mom’s sister and her younger daughter, Max. Raven is navigating using her powers while being a normal high school teenager.

The best part of this graphic novel is easily the illustration. Gabriel Picolo does an excellent job of blending black & white with Raven’s purple color. It’s seen in Raven’s hair, lighting within the panels, and the writing bubbles. This novel is set in New Orleans, which coincides well with Raven struggling to have control over her demons… literally.

Additionally, I like Raven’s support group. Max is Raven’s best friend. She gives Raven noise-canceling headphones to cancel out the voice she’s hearing. Max takes Raven to an occult shop to discover more information about her powers. I would read a story of only Max and Raven living their lives in New Orleans.

My only minor complaint is that the story felt predictable and corny in parts. This is a young adult novel, so I believe that’s why I felt this way while reading. The male interest in Raven’s life is the stereotypical jock and nothing is interesting about him. There is a surprise appearance of a well-known villain, but I won’t reveal who this is.

I rated Teen Titans: Raven four out of five stars on Goodreads. The artwork is intricate, while the story knocked off a star on a five-star rating. Raven isn’t the only Titan to receive the graphic novel treatment. Garcia and Picolo will be writing/illustrating other books with the other Titans. The Beast Boy graphic novel will be released on September 8th, 2020. Teen Titans: Raven can be purchased at any local bookstore or comic store.

4 thoughts on “Read Raven’s Origin Story in Teen Titans: Raven

    • I highly recommend it for the artwork alone. The art is great. It blends Raven’s signature purple color with black & white throughout the panels. There’s going to be a Beast Boy version released later this year, and I can’t wait to read it.

      Like

  1. I’ve been wanting to read this. The artwork on the cover looks amazing. And I’m looking forward to the release of the Beast Boy version.

    Like

Leave a reply to purplegirl31 Cancel reply