
Amazing Stories Vol.1 No.1 April 1926 – Saturn Ship & Ice Skaters Cover
This is the historic debut cover of Amazing Stories, Volume 1, Number 1, April 1926 — the very first issue of Hugo Gernsback's landmark science fiction magazine that coined the term 'scientifiction.' The striking illustration depicts a ringed Saturn-like planet with a tall-masted sailing ship improbably lodged within its rings, looming over a frozen landscape where fur-clad figures skate and scramble in panic below. The cover image likely illustrates Jules Verne's Arctic adventure content, blending nautical and cosmic wonder in classic early pulp fashion.
A full-rigged sailing ship trapped in Saturn's rings while panicked Arctic skaters flee below — this is closer to 'exploding space station' than quiet library. For a debut issue from 1926, it delivers delirious cosmic spectacle with remarkable confidence.
“April, 1926 25 Cents AMAZING STORIES HUGO GERNSBACK EDITOR Stories By H. G. WELLS JULES VERNE EDGAR ALLEN POE EXPERIMENTER PUBLISHING COMPANY, NEW YORK, PUBLISHERS OF RADIO NEWS - SCIENCE & INVENTION - RADIO REVIEW - AMAZING STORIES - RADIO INTERNACIONAL To my good friend, Rick Norwood with best wishes – Hgernsback 7/8/65”





