Weird Tales 'Drums of Damballah' by Seabury Quinn — March 1930 Cover
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Weird Tales 'Drums of Damballah' by Seabury Quinn — March 1930 Cover

Embodying the pulp era's fascination with exotic occultism and sensational danger, this cover depicts a semi-clad woman entwined by a massive constrictor snake, her expression eerily calm as the serpent's fanged head rears toward her face. Behind her, a wide-eyed figure emerges from an open crate in horror. The scene references Vodou imagery — specifically the loa Damballah — rendered with lurid theatrical flair typical of Weird Tales' most provocative covers of the early Depression era.

Category: Magazine Cover
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: C.C. Senf
Era: Pulp Era (1920s-1940s)
Decade: 1930s
Country: United States
Coolness: 8/10

A single frame packs serpentine menace, exotic occultism, a screaming witness, and a mysterious crate into one explosive tableau. The calm of the snake-draped woman against the terror of the background figure creates maximum dramatic contrast — pure pulp storytelling economy.

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Weird Tales The Unique Magazine Drums of Damballah by Seabury Quinn Also a Story by Gaston Leroux Author of The Phantom of the Opera March 1930 25¢ 10¢ in Canada

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