
Planet Stories Summer 1951 – Queen of the Martian Catacombs by Leigh Brackett
More visceral than contemporaries like Earle Bergey's Famous Fantastic Mysteries covers, this Planet Stories entry delivers archetypal pulp planetary romance: a flame-haired woman in a blue dress rides a nightmarish cyclopean alien mount, reins in hand, while a chained, grimacing man strains beneath her in the Martian dust. The lurid yellow-orange atmosphere, the creature's single mechanical eye, and the coiled whip create a tableau of alien-world dominance that perfectly captures Leigh Brackett's sword-and-planet aesthetic.
A red-haired woman whipping an alien cyclops-beast while a half-naked man writhes in chains beneath her on the sands of Mars — this cover is an absolute newsstand ambush. Leigh Brackett's byline on a desert-worlds novel seals the deal for any planetary romance fan of the era.
“PLANET stories SUMMER 20c S.O.S. APHRODITE! by STANLEY MULLEN HARNESS COPPEL ST. CLAIR Across the red sands fought the Terran changeling to reach Berild, beautiful and fey — and blast her into eternal dust... QUEEN OF THE MARTIAN CATACOMBS A Desert-worlds Novel by LEIGH BRACKETT”





