
Jenny's Junk Used Spaceships, Galaxy Magazine Cover February 1960
Published in February 1960, as the Space Race between the US and USSR dominated global consciousness, this Galaxy Science Fiction cover offers a sardonic, humorous take on the future — a junkyard for used spaceships and second-hand robots. A relaxed woman knits beside a handpainted sign reading 'Jenny's Junk,' surrounded by battered rockets and mechanical debris under an alien sky. The image blends domestic tranquility with cosmic absurdity, a hallmark of Galaxy's sophisticated, satirical editorial voice.
Gleefully subversive rather than bombastic — the joke of a housewife casually knitting amid a graveyard of interstellar hardware is peak Galaxy wit. Not unhinged, but delightfully absurd and visually inventive.
“Galaxy Magazine FEBRUARY 1960 50¢ MEETING OF THE MINDS by ROBERT SHECKLEY THE DAY THE ICICLE WORKS CLOSED by FREDERIK POHL ONE PLANET — ONE LANGUAGE by WILLY LEY THE NUSE MAN MAN by MARGARET ST. CLAIR And Other Stories JENNY'S JUNK USED SPACESHIPS SECOND HAND ROBOTS”





