
Marvel Tales Dec. 1939 – 'Angel From Hell' Winged Aviatrix Cover
Before you stands a kinetic masterpiece of late-Depression pulp bravado: a winged, helmeted woman — half angel, half aerial combatant — clutches a crouching aviator armed with a pistol, her iridescent feathered wings spanning the composition as dogfighting biplanes streak through a smoke-choked sky below. The piece perfectly encapsulates pulp's breathless marriage of supernatural fantasy and aviation adventure, rendered in rich gouache with a dramatic diagonal thrust that propels the eye from the gun barrel upward through the luminous wings.
The collision of angelic mythology with hard-boiled aviation action is executed with genuine compositional flair, though the anatomical proportions of the figures strain credibility in that endearingly breathless pulp fashion. The wings, impossibly luminous and massive, overwhelm physics entirely — which is precisely the point.
“MARVEL TALES 15¢ DEC. The ANGEL FROM HELL gripping unusual novel by NILS O. SONDERLUND PLUS SEVERAL OTHER ASTOUNDING STORIES”





