comicbooks.com Join Free

★ comicbooks.com Reading Room

Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951)

Ziff-Davis · 1951 · 36 pages

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

Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 1 of 36
1 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 2 of 36
2 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 3 of 36
3 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 4 of 36
4 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 5 of 36
5 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 6 of 36
6 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 7 of 36
7 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 8 of 36
8 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 9 of 36
9 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 10 of 36
10 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 11 of 36
11 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 12 of 36
12 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 13 of 36
13 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 14 of 36
14 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 15 of 36
15 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 16 of 36
16 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 17 of 36
17 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 18 of 36
18 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 19 of 36
19 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 20 of 36
20 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 21 of 36
21 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 22 of 36
22 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 23 of 36
23 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 24 of 36
24 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 25 of 36
25 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 26 of 36
26 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 27 of 36
27 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 28 of 36
28 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 29 of 36
29 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 30 of 36
30 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 31 of 36
31 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 32 of 36
32 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 33 of 36
33 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 34 of 36
34 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 35 of 36
35 / 36
Little Al of the F.B.I. #11 (1951) — page 36 of 36
36 / 36
Contains 5 stories
Mr. F.B.I.
1 pp · crime

In the early 1930s, as crime waves grip the nation, J. Edgar Hoover expands the FBI's authority to tackle kidnapping, extortion, bank robbery, and murder—and the Bureau wages relentless warfare against the mobsters fueling the lawless era. When a confrontation turns violent, agents and criminals clash in a deadly shootout that defines the FBI's no-surrender approach to bringing order back to America.

The Fiddler
8 pp · crime

When warehouses full of vital defense materials start burning across the city, Little Al of the F.B.I. and his partner Ox Collins pick up the trail of a twisted arsonist who announces each crime with violin music and taunting laughter—a criminal calling himself the Fiddler. With fingerprint evidence and a tip from an unexpected source, the agents zero in on their quarry's hideout, leading to a rooftop confrontation that reveals the criminal's desperate obsession and one final, fiery gambit.

Roses Are Red As Blood
7 pp · crime

Little Al, the F.B.I.'s toughest pint-sized agent, lands in a hospital bed after a drug-smuggling stakeout goes wrong—only to uncover a morphine operation hidden right under his nose. When he discovers the hospital staff using hollowed-out flower stems to move the dope, Little Al must untangle a web of corruption, betrayal, and danger that puts his life on the line in ways he never expected.

Basil "the Owl" Banghart
6 pp · crime

When Internal Revenue agents haul Basil "the Owl" Banghart into a small-town New York jail in 1932 on a liquor-smuggling charge, he crosses paths with another caged crook—the notorious Roger Touhey—and the two quickly hatch a daring escape. Once free, the sharp-shooting Banghart becomes Touhey's new enforcer, and the two criminals begin plotting increasingly bold schemes to stay ahead of the law. This gritty 1951 crime story from *Little Al of the F.B.I.* follows their dangerous partnership as it spirals toward an inevitable reckoning.

The Drone
7 pp · crime

F.B.I. Special Agent Little Al Conway and his aide Ox go undercover as truck drivers to catch "The Drone," a cunning criminal who uses bee-filled explosives to hijack cargo trucks across state lines. When a blonde waitress at a diner plants a bomb-hive in their cab, the agents follow the trail to the Drone's estate, only to find themselves trapped and used as hostages by the clever mastermind. Little Al and Ox must outthink their captor and his swarms of deadly bees if they're going to stop his escape and bring him to justice.

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

See something wrong with this issue? Report it.