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G.I. Joe #32 (1954)

Ziff-Davis · 1954 · 36 pages

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

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ContinueG.I. Joe #33 →
Contains 4 stories
The Search
1 pp · humor
Pvt. DopeySgt. McTuff

When Sgt. McTuff discovers Pvt. Dopey missing from his bunk, he launches a frantic search across the base—through supply cans, tanks, and every building he can think of—growing more exhausted by the minute. Just when the sergeant finally decides to call it a night and turn in, he gets a rude surprise that explains where the troublemaker's been hiding all along.

Step to the Rear of the Bus
9 pp · war
Pvt. Joe BurchSgt. MulvaneyCpl. CarpuccioPvt. Alvin OtisLt. ParkerPvt. Reilly

Sgt. Mulvaney and his men are thrilled to finally use their weekend passes and a military bus for some much-needed R&R—until a motorcycle officer intercepts them with new orders to transport refugees from the village of Ko-Loo instead. What should have been a simple drive becomes a chaotic mission when the soldiers arrive to find far more villagers than expected, and an elderly man named Woo Tang refuses to leave his home, creating an impossible situation for the exhausted crew.

Leave Him Alone!
6 pp · war
Pvt. Joe BurchSgt. MulvaneyPvt. Stet MasonCpl. CarpuccioPvt. Cornelius Hoolihan [Weepy]Pvt. Eckersall [Meatball]

When Pvt. Stet Mason refuses to join Baker Company's monthly visits to their fallen comrade's grave, he sets off a sharp conflict over what honoring the dead truly means. As Sgt. Mulvaney and the others defend their promise to visit, Mason challenges them to consider whether grief-stricken routine might be doing more harm than good—and whether the happy soldier they knew would want them trapped in sorrow. This 1954 war story cuts deeper than its premise, asking tough questions about loyalty, loss, and what we owe to those we've lost.

The Replacement
7 pp · war
Pvt. Joe BurchSgt. MulvaneyPvt. Ben RogersPvt. Cornelius Hoolihan [Weepy]Pvt. Marvin

Pvt. Ben Rogers is haunted by nightmares of his fallen buddy Marvin, whose ghost-like visitations torment him each night and keep the entire squad sleepless—until a new soldier, Wes Corbett, arrives and takes the bunk next to his. When Corbett finally confronts Rogers about the root of his anguish, he forces the troubled soldier to face a painful truth about guilt, respect, and what it means to value friendship while there's still time.

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