
Slaves of the Worm — Fantastic Adventures, February 1948 Monster Cover
Published in February 1948, this cover captures late pulp-era science fantasy at its most visceral — just as the genre was transitioning toward the Atomic Age. The illustration depicts a massive subterranean worm-beast, its gaping maw dripping with saliva and lined with razor fangs, looming over a dark-haired woman in tattered clothing while robed figures lurk in the shadows. Created for Richard S. Shaver's underground-civilization serial, it exemplifies the lurid, cavern-dwelling horror aesthetic that made Shaver's controversial 'dero' stories infamous in the pulp world.
A massive slavering worm-god with dripping fangs consuming the entire lower half of the cover while a barely-clothed woman teeters on the edge of its hellmouth is peak pulp derangement. The Shaver Mystery connection — conspiracy theories about underground dero slaves — pushes this into genuinely unhinged territory.
“fantastic ADVENTURES FEBRUARY 25¢ VOLUME 10 NUMBER 2 "SLAVES OF THE WORM" by RICHARD S. SHAVER”





