
Chesley Bonestell's Giant Hand Pinching Jupiter, Astounding Science Fiction Jan 1950
A deep cobalt-blue cosmos frames an impossibly oversized human hand — its fingers posed as if casually pinching a banded, glowing Jupiter between thumb and forefinger. The wristwatch glinting gold at the cuff grounds the cosmic in the mundane with surreal wit. This is the cover for 'The Xi Effect' by Philip Latham, a story about the universe shrinking — and Bonestell's composition literalizes that concept with eerie, quiet precision. Scale collapse has never felt so intimate or so unsettling.
The concept is deceptively quiet but conceptually wild — a human hand dwarfing Jupiter implies a universe-scale catastrophe rendered with domestic nonchalance. The wristwatch detail elevates this from mere spectacle to philosophical surrealism, packing enormous imaginative payload into a single composed image.
“Astounding SCIENCE FICTION JANUARY 1950 25 CENTS REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. STREET & SMITH'S ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION JANUARY 1950 Chesley Bonestell THE Xi EFFECT by Philip Latham”





