comicbooks.com Join Free
HomeContact Comics#5Read

★ comicbooks.com Reading Room

Contact Comics #5 (1945)

Aviation Press · 1945 · 52 pages

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

Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 1 of 52
1 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 2 of 52
2 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 3 of 52
3 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 4 of 52
4 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 5 of 52
5 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 6 of 52
6 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 7 of 52
7 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 8 of 52
8 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 9 of 52
9 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 10 of 52
10 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 11 of 52
11 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 12 of 52
12 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 13 of 52
13 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 14 of 52
14 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 15 of 52
15 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 16 of 52
16 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 17 of 52
17 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 18 of 52
18 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 19 of 52
19 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 20 of 52
20 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 21 of 52
21 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 22 of 52
22 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 23 of 52
23 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 24 of 52
24 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 25 of 52
25 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 26 of 52
26 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 27 of 52
27 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 28 of 52
28 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 29 of 52
29 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 30 of 52
30 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 31 of 52
31 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 32 of 52
32 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 33 of 52
33 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 34 of 52
34 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 35 of 52
35 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 36 of 52
36 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 37 of 52
37 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 38 of 52
38 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 39 of 52
39 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 40 of 52
40 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 41 of 52
41 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 42 of 52
42 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 43 of 52
43 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 44 of 52
44 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 45 of 52
45 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 46 of 52
46 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 47 of 52
47 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 48 of 52
48 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 49 of 52
49 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 50 of 52
50 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 51 of 52
51 / 52
Contact Comics #5 (1945) — page 52 of 52
52 / 52
ContinueContact Comics #6 →
Contains 10 stories
Untitled story
8 pp · war
Golden Eagle
Untitled story
6 pp · superhero
Black Venus [Mary La Roche]Captain Owens (U.S. airman)three unnamed American acesNijo (villain)Nijo"s henchmen (villains)
Fighters in the Night
6 pp · war

In the shadowed skies of 1945, naval aviators take to the night in a dangerous dance of skill and nerve, their missions shrouded in secrecy. "Fighters in the Night" captures the tense, high-stakes world of aerial combat under cover of darkness, where every maneuver could mean the difference between victory and loss.

Radio Plane Saver
6 pp · war

When a DC-3 airliner goes missing near Tucson, Arizona on Christmas Eve 1940, the Federal Communications Commission's Radio Intelligence Division sees an opportunity to prove its worth—by using radio direction-finding technology to locate lost aircraft. What begins as a single dramatic rescue evolves into a full-scale, life-saving operation that spans military and commercial aviation, from pinpointing downed planes to coordinating rescue missions for shipwrecked sailors across the globe. This is the remarkable true story of how R.I.D. became an indispensable tool in the skies during wartime.

Eyes in the Skies... The Story of Aerial Photography
2 pp · war
Robot Plane 1918 Model
4 pp · war
The B-29
1 pp · war

In this 1945 wartime feature, discover the engineering marvel that changed aerial combat: the B-29 Superfortress, the most powerful bomber the world had ever seen. From its revolutionary double bomb bays and streamlined design to its first devastating raid on the Japanese homeland in June 1944, this story showcases the specifications and capabilities that made the B-29 the U.S. Army Air Forces' ultimate strategic weapon.

The Mars
1 pp · war

When Nazi scientist Von Tramm creates a terrifying device that transforms ordinary soldiers into towering giants, American fliers find themselves outmatched in the skies—until the mysterious Flying Phantom and his ward Kenny discover that size without courage is no advantage at all. With the Phantom captured and facing Von Tramm's electrodes, Kenny must race to the rescue and turn the very invention meant to create a master race into the Nazis' undoing.

Untitled story
6 pp · superhero
The Phantom Flyer
Untitled story
6 pp · war
Tommy TomahawkRed Wing

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

See something wrong with this issue? Report it.