
Astounding Stories 'The Invisible Death' Cover, Victor Rousseau, 1930
A newsstand browser in 1930 would have recoiled instinctively — a desperate man in a brown suit fires a ray-gun while ghostly disembodied hands claw at him from thin air, the U.S. Capitol dome looming ominously in the background. This cover for Astounding Stories of Super-Science captures pure pulp menace: invisible assailants, futuristic weaponry, and civic landmarks under threat, rendered in bold, visceral gouache strokes that demand immediate purchase for a mere twenty cents.
Invisible assailants clawing at a ray-gun-wielding hero in front of the U.S. Capitol is peak Golden Age pulp paranoia — this belongs on a dorm room wall, framed and lit dramatically. The composition is feverishly kinetic and the concept delightfully unhinged.
“20c ASTOUNDING STORIES OF SUPER-SCIENCE THE INVISIBLE DEATH By VICTOR ROUSSEAU America Strikes Back at the Sinister Invisible Empire”





