
Frank R. Paul's Flying Saucer Attack, Amazing Stories Nov 1926
A brilliant copper-domed flying craft bristling with portholes and mechanical fins dominates the sky as panicked crowds flee below in terror. Frank R. Paul's unmistakable hand renders this early Amazing Stories cover with lurid energy — the disc-shaped vessel hovers menacingly over a waterfront city, its reflective hull gleaming orange against a dramatic sky while tiny human figures scramble across a dock in pure hysteria. It's proto-flying-saucer imagery years before the term existed.
Paul's vision of a mechanical disc-craft terrorizing a harbor city in 1926 is breathtakingly ahead of its time, predating flying saucer mythology by over two decades. The ambition to visualize mass panic beneath alien technology with such compositional confidence earns high pulp distinction.
“November 1926 Amazing Stories 25 Cents HUGO GERNSBACK Storles by RALPH MILNE FARLEY, JULIAN HUXLEY, GARRETT P. SERVISS”





