
Frank R. Paul's Flying Saucer Invasion, Science Fiction Magazine Jan 1941
Sheer urban terror electrifies this vivid pulp cover as a luminous green flying saucer unleashes devastating energy beams on a panicked city, while a massive ornate rocket hurtles into the foreground. Civilians flee in the streets below a burning skyline, a subway entrance sign barely visible amid the chaos. The blood-red sky amplifies the apocalyptic dread, rendered in Frank R. Paul's signature bold, almost cartoonish realism that defined an era of extraterrestrial menace.
A jewel-encrusted torpedo rocket colliding with a green disc saucer firing death rays over a helpless city while citizens scramble past a subway entrance is peak pulp delirium. Paul's shameless maximalism — cramming four simultaneous catastrophes into one cover — is the art form at its most gloriously unhinged.
“SCIENCE FICTION JAN. 15c SPACE-FLIGHT OF TERROR A NOVEL OF INTRIGUE IN THE VOID by RAY CUMMINGS SUBWAY 20c in Canada”





