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The JLA comic was initially amongst the most popular of DC Comics' publications, but by the end of the 1960s, it had become overshadowed by Marvel Comics' equivalent super-team, the Avengers, in sales and quality.
In 1996, a new Justice League series titled JLA debuted, written by Grant Morrison and with art by Howard Porter and John Dell (though the new version of team first appeared in the miniseries JLA: A Midsummer's Nightmare, written by Mark Waid and Fabian Nicieza).
In 2005, the controversial story arc by Geoff Johns and Alan Heinberg called Crisis of Conscience (JLA #115-120), the aftermath of Identity Crisis, and a lead-in to Infinite Crisis led to the dissolution of the Justice League of America.
We then join the rest of the JLA as they battle the Ocean Master & the Black Manta, who have laid claim to the ruins that now comprise Atlantis, and while these two villain put on an impressive display of their powers the JLA prove to be too powerful.
The sequence where the JLA is pulled through the magical portal is also a visually engaging bit of work, as Kyle nightmare adds a nice sense of foreboding as the JLA are pulled to their seeming dooms.
The issue also has the JLA dealing with the idea that Aquaman is still alive, and Joe Kelly does a nice job reminding the reader that Aquaman was a vital part of this group, and that Superman & Wonder Woman were far closer to the man than the rest of the team.