
Frank R. Paul's Death Ray Villain, Amazing Stories March 1928
In a sinister Oriental court draped in shadow and menace, a robed villain in dragon-embroidered silk operates a gleaming brass ray projector, firing a blinding beam at a bound captive writhing in agony. Masked attendants in dark robes crowd the gallery behind him, bearing witness to this demonstration of diabolical science. Frank R. Paul's vivid gouache illustration crackles with pulp energy — part mad-science torture chamber, part exotic spectacle — capturing the xenophobic adventure-thriller aesthetic that dominated late 1920s science fiction covers.
Dragon-robed madman zaps a helpless victim with a death ray while his hooded cult watches — this cover has more sinister spectacle per square inch than a month of lesser magazines!
“March VOL. 2 No. 12 AMAZING STORIES HUGO GERNSBACK EDITOR BROADCAST WRNY STATION 25 Cents AMAZING STORIES — SCIENTIFICTION March 1928 Stories by H.G. Wells Jules Verne Geoffrey Hewelcke EXPERIMENTER PUBLISHING COMPANY, NEW YORK, PUBLISHERS OF RADIO NEWS - SCIENCE & INVENTION - FRENCH HUMOR - RADIO LISTENERS' GUIDE Paul”





