comicbooks.com Join Free
HomeContact Comics#2Read

★ comicbooks.com Reading Room

Contact Comics #2 (1944)

Aviation Press · 1944 · 52 pages

Free to read · restored edition by comicbooks.com · Issue details →

Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 1 of 52
1 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 2 of 52
2 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 3 of 52
3 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 4 of 52
4 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 5 of 52
5 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 6 of 52
6 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 7 of 52
7 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 8 of 52
8 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 9 of 52
9 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 10 of 52
10 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 11 of 52
11 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 12 of 52
12 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 13 of 52
13 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 14 of 52
14 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 15 of 52
15 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 16 of 52
16 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 17 of 52
17 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 18 of 52
18 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 19 of 52
19 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 20 of 52
20 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 21 of 52
21 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 22 of 52
22 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 23 of 52
23 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 24 of 52
24 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 25 of 52
25 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 26 of 52
26 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 27 of 52
27 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 28 of 52
28 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 29 of 52
29 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 30 of 52
30 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 31 of 52
31 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 32 of 52
32 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 33 of 52
33 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 34 of 52
34 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 35 of 52
35 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 36 of 52
36 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 37 of 52
37 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 38 of 52
38 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 39 of 52
39 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 40 of 52
40 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 41 of 52
41 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 42 of 52
42 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 43 of 52
43 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 44 of 52
44 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 45 of 52
45 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 46 of 52
46 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 47 of 52
47 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 48 of 52
48 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 49 of 52
49 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 50 of 52
50 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 51 of 52
51 / 52
Contact Comics #2 (1944) — page 52 of 52
52 / 52
ContinueContact Comics #3 →
Contains 10 stories
Solo Job
1 pp · war
Major James Howell Howard
Flight out of Fire
8 pp · war
Golden Eagle

The Golden Eagle discovers a catastrophic pattern when he lands on a volcanic island to investigate the mysterious deaths of American soldiers—only to be captured by the renowned Japanese pilot Colonel Mulaki, who commands a hidden air base concealed within the volcano itself. Mulaki reveals his ingenious operation: a secret hangar nestled inside the dormant peak, from which swift helicopter-planes launch devastating strikes before vanishing back to safety, while a man-made furnace mimics volcanic smoke to keep the island abandoned and undetected. Now the Golden Eagle must find a way out of this underground fortress and expose the threat to the American forces above.

"The span of years since the introduction..."
7 pp · war
The Beasts with Wings
6 pp · superhero
Flamingo
Warplanes of our Fighting Allies
2 pp · non-fiction
Rubber Cows
6 pp · non-fiction

Tracing the thrilling history of lighter-than-air flight from ancient China through the modern age, this story chronicles the pioneering discoveries and daring experiments that transformed the balloon from scientific curiosity into a crucial weapon of war. From Henry Cavendish's hydrogen gas revelation and the Montgolfier brothers' first successful ascents, through Count Zeppelin's rigid dirigibles and contemporary barrage balloons, witness how visionary inventors and fearless aeronauts pushed the boundaries of human flight. Today's balloons stand as indispensable allies in the defense arsenal, proving that the dream of soaring into the sky has become humanity's greatest achievement.

Untitled story
6 pp · superhero
Black Venus [Mary LeRoche]Lieutenant Bill Evans (death)Agent X (villain, death)the Japanese (villains, one dies)

In "null," Mary finds herself caught between duty and love as she learns of a critical mission to capture the mysterious Agent X, a spy whose theft of vital Pacific theater documents threatens the U.S. war effort—though the cost may be the man she holds dear.

Flat-Top
6 pp · non-fiction; war

During the Battle of the Coral Sea, American aircraft carriers and their pilots engage Japanese forces in a pivotal naval confrontation that rewrites warfare strategy. From fighters and dive bombers to torpedo planes, the crew of Carrier X launches a coordinated assault that culminates in a major victory—and later, during the raid on Rabaul, pilots like Lieutenant Davidson demonstrate fearless ingenuity to defend their ship against a desperate Japanese counterattack. This non-fiction account celebrates the courage and skill of American naval aviators who turned the tide of the Pacific War.

Doom From the Skies
5 pp · war
Tommy TomahawkRed Wing

When a mysterious "ghost plane" begins terrorizing the Tomahawk Squadron with uncanny aerial skill despite appearing to have no pilot, Tommy Tomahawk and Red Wing must uncover the truth behind the menace before fear cripples their ranks. Tommy takes a dangerous gamble to board the enemy craft and discover what—or who—is really controlling it. The answers lie hidden beneath the cockpit floor, where an unexpected enemy awaits.

Right Guy
1 pp · non-fiction; war
Lieutenant Walter Hardzog

Lieutenant Walter Hardzog of the B-25 "Hephzibah" has earned his crew's deep respect not just as a skilled pilot, but as a steady presence who keeps morale high even when danger closes in. When the damaged bomber faces both heavy wing injuries and a fierce attack from enemy fighters over the Mediterranean, Hardzog's calm confidence and expert flying prove exactly what his men need to survive the odds.

Restored edition © comicbooks.com. Our digitization, remastering, and presentation are our own work.

See something wrong with this issue? Report it.