



of pre- Crisis Earth-Three, and Lois Lane Kent of pre- Crisis Earth-Two voluntarily sequestered themselves in "paradise". The plot begins when, in Crisis on Infinite Earths, Kal-L (the Superman of pre- Crisis Earth-Two), the Superboy of Earth Prime, Alexander Luthor, Jr. 5.2 Series cancelled during the crossover.Infinite Crisis #2 was also the top seller in top 300 comics for November 2005 with pre-order sales of 207,564. This was almost double the second ranked comic House of M #7, which had pre-order sales of 134,429. Infinite Crisis #1 was ranked first in the top 300 comics for October 2005 with pre-order sales of 249,265. A major theme was the nature of heroism, contrasting the often dark and conflicted modern-day heroes with memories of "lighter" and ostensibly more noble and collegial heroes of American comic books' earlier days. Some of the characters featured were alternate versions of comic icons such as an alternate Superman named Kal-L, who came from a parallel universe called Earth-Two. It revisited characters and concepts from that earlier Crisis, including the existence of DC's Multiverse. The series storyline was a sequel to DC's 1985 limited series Crisis on Infinite Earths, which "rebooted" much of the DC continuity in an effort to fix 50 years of contradictory character history. The main miniseries debuted in October 2005, and each issue was released with two variant covers: one by Pérez and one by Jim Lee and Sandra Hope. " Infinite Crisis" is a 2005–2006 comic book storyline published by DC Comics, consisting of an eponymous, seven-issue comic book limited series written by Geoff Johns and illustrated by Phil Jimenez, George Pérez, Ivan Reis, and Jerry Ordway, and a number of tie-in books.
