
MY original tumblr post was here. This February 1953 cover of Famous Fantastic Mysteries includes the text “Full Moon< an exotic fantasy-mystery classic by Talbot Mundy." It was originally posted by pulpcovers.com.
MY original tumblr post was here. This February 1953 cover of Famous Fantastic Mysteries includes the text “Full Moon< an exotic fantasy-mystery classic by Talbot Mundy." It was originally posted by pulpcovers.com.
MY original tumblr post was here. This cover of Famous Fantastic Mysteries for September 1942 contains the text “A Sensational Novel of the Future: A Brand New World, by Ray Cummings. Also an exciting novelet of supernatural adventure.” It was originally posted on tumblr bypulpcovers.com.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
My original tumblr post was here. This illustration by the great Wally Wood was first posted on tumblr by TOMORROW & BEYOND and comes to us via pulpexplosion.
My original tumblr post was here. This illustration, entitled “Perils of the Princess,” was first posted on tumblr by The Bristol Board, who further identifies it as “Star Wars sex fantasy by Wally Wood from the Weird Sex-Fantasy portfolio, published by Collector’s Press, 1977.” It comes to us via reginaldjuice.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
My original tumblr post was here. This image by Harold McCauley was initially posted by X-Ray Delta One on Flickr, was reposted on tumblr by johnnythehorse and comes to us via mudwerks.
My original tumblr post was here. This image is Focus by MarioChavez. It was originally posted by kinkypencils and comes to us via unflujodefotones.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
My original tumblr post was here. This cover of Famous Fantastic Mysteries promotes the story “The Woman Who Couldn’t Die,” by Arthur Stringer. It was first posted at pulpcovers.com.