The Teen Titans were my second favorite group at DC, after the Legion of Super-Heroes. The tales reprinted in this omnibus edition were published before my time, but I have enjoyed going back and reading these tales. There is some hackneyed 60s slang, much of it overused, but a lot of nods to the popular music of the time, as well as some politics.
Bob Haney wrote most of these stories, and we see the Titans evolve from the initial trio of Robin, Kid Flash, and Aqualad, all around twelve years old, to a more mature, post-high school team that included Wonder Girl and Speedy. I say post high school because in the next to last issue of this collection Wonder Girl rents an apartment. The villains are kinda wild at times, including the Mad Mod, a British clothes maker who plants stolen goods in clothing shipments, Mr Twister, who has come back in the recent Titans Hunt series, the Scorcher, and various other bad guys. Artist Neal Adams comes in towards the end and creates some continuity by having a race of extra-dimensional aliens trying to take over Earth, and ties them back to a few earlier Titans foes. Nice touch.
The art is almost all Nick Cardy, with some additional art by Neal Adams and Gil Kane. Cardy's Titans are a joy to look at, because he had a way of creating innovative panel structure that was unusual at the time. His Titans look their age and there is some great dynamic posturing in all the fight scenes.
This omnibus also reprints the six issue (plus the Showcase tryout) Hawk and Dove. Initially created by Steve Ditko, he only did a couple of issues with writer Steve Skeates, and then Gil Kane comes in to draw and then write the final issues. The Ditko issues have been reprinted before in the Steve Ditko Omnibus, but the later non-Ditko issues haven't, so it was great to finally read them. I got a bit tired of the bickering between the two heroes, but that was their thing. As much as I liked Ditko's art on his two issues, Kane's art really shines. I suppose this series was included because Hawk and Dove show up and take part in one issue of Teen Titans (and will later appear in the Bronze Age Omnibus).
So, even though the stories are rather dated in some respects, they're a lot of fun to read if you can take it all with a grain of salt. The first story appeared in 1964 or so, and as the series progresses, the vibe and urgency of the 60s makes its way into the book. Hippies, non-hippies, greasers, it's a bit of a microcosm of 60s America. The Titans are definitely groovy and square at the same time, but that's alright. Perhaps the most amusing thing is to see how flirty Wonder Girl was, who seemed interested in Kid Flash, Speedy, Hawk, and several minor characters. She even gets a tad flirty with Robin.
Definitely pick this up if you're a Titans fan. The first few issues are very Silver Age-ish DC, but things change rather quickly, and although most issues are still one and dones, it ties into other DC books at the time rather well (especially considering Haney was never all that interested in continuity). And if you like this book, and the following Bronze Age omni, check out DC's current Titans series, which features the same characters.