Weird Tales May 1937 – John Cawder's Wife, Blue-Skinned Woman with Portraits
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Weird Tales May 1937 – John Cawder's Wife, Blue-Skinned Woman with Portraits

Unexpectedly eerie for its era, this Weird Tales cover depicts a blue-skinned woman in a crimson gown clutching a small white animal, surrounded by framed portraits that seem to breathe with supernatural life — one showing a ghostly woman, another a figure in red. The unsettling reincarnation theme from P. Schuyler Miller's 'John Cawder's Wife' is rendered with painterly Gothic menace, blending portraiture-within-portraiture into a claustrophobic supernatural tableau that feels more psychological than pulpy.

Category: Magazine Cover
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Margaret Brundage
Era: Pulp Era (1920s-1940s)
Decade: 1930s
Country: United States
Coolness: 6/10

A blue woman holding what appears to be a small lamb while haunted portraits loom behind her is either high Gothic art or a very unusual visit to a gallery. Brundage restrains herself admirably — there are no tentacles, which for Weird Tales counts as minimalism.

Text in image:

THE MAN WHO AMAZED FISH — by FRANK OWEN MAY Weird Tales 15¢ SEABURY QUINN MINDRET LORD AUGUST DERLETH Through all the ages Cawder men will always return to — Cawder's wife JOHN CAWDER'S WIFE A novelette by P. SCHUYLER MILLER

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