
EMSH Cover: Horse Rider Meets Crashed Saucer, If Magazine August 1958
A massive white draft horse dominates the foreground, its dark-robed rider surveying the scene with alien calm — a jarring collision of primitive and futuristic. Behind them, a sleek silver flying saucer lies crashed and tilted in rust-red alien desert terrain, its shaken pilot slumped nearby. Two pale moons hang in a violet sky above eroded mesa formations. Ed Emshwiller's confident gouache work captures the classic 1950s pulp theme of technological hubris meeting the raw, ungovernable frontier of alien worlds.
The juxtaposition of a primitive horseman looming over a wrecked spacecraft is a genuinely imaginative concept, suggesting a richly layered alien civilization story. Emshwiller executes the contrast with restraint, letting the visual irony do the work rather than leaning into chaos.
“WORLDS OF IF SCIENCE FICTION IN THIS ISSUE THE WAGES OF DEATH By ROBERT SILVERBERG plus LLOYD BIGGLE • CHARLES de VET • HARLAN ELLISON AUGUST 35 CENTS IND EMSH”





