
Wolf-Woman Cover, Weird Tales September 1927 by C.C. Senf
A 1927 newsstand browser would have done a double-take at this lurid, captivating cover: a luminous, long-haired nude woman surrounded by snarling wolves faces down a pistol-wielding cowboy in a darkened cave. C.C. Senf's confident gouache work renders the Wolf-Woman as simultaneously threatening and ethereal, her cascading auburn hair the only modesty afforded her. The scene crackles with transgressive energy — wilderness, femininity, and violence colliding in the precise visual vocabulary that made Weird Tales America's most daring pulp.
A nude supernatural wolf-woman commanding a pack of snarling wolves while a pistol-packing cowboy cowers — this is peak Weird Tales pulp bravado. It belongs on a dorm room wall AND in a museum of American illustration history, simultaneously.
“Weird Tales / The Unique Magazine / The Wolf-Woman / by Bassett Morgan / September 1927 / 25¢ / Sax Rohmer - Frank Owen / Seabury Quinn - Greye La Spina / Edmond Hamilton - Otis Adelbert Kline”





