
Duplication Machine Creates Woman's Clone — Amazing Stories, November 1939
Rendered in vivid gouache with the dramatic chiaroscuro typical of late-1930s pulp illustration, this cover blazes with lurid orange and purple contrasts. A male scientist operates a massive cylindrical duplicator machine, projecting twin beams that simultaneously reveal a woman's skeletal interior and produce her perfect physical double — a brilliant visual metaphor for the cloning premise of William F. Temple's 'The 4-Sided Triangle.' The composition is kinetic and technically ambitious, with laboratory apparatus framing the sensationalist spectacle.
A near-perfect pulp artifact: the simultaneous X-ray skeleton and physical double rendered in a single beam of light is a genuinely inventive visual concept executed with maximum lurid energy. The purple-orange palette, heaving composition, and brazen pseudo-science imagery make this an exemplar of late Golden Age pulp illustration at its most deliriously committed.
“HIDDEN UNIVERSE by Ralph Milne Farley See Back Cover AMAZING STORIES NOVEMBER 20c The 4-Sided Triangle by WILLIAM F. TEMPLE And Great Stories By ROBERT MOORE WILLIAMS FREDERIC ARNOLD KUMMER JR TOM W[ILLIAMSON?]”





