
Science Fiction Quarterly #2 Winter 1940 — Red Rocket Over Alien Moon
Embodying every golden-age pulp convention with gleeful confidence, this cover presents a gleaming torpedo-shaped rocket — lacquered red with gold trim and a massive circular viewport — dominating the foreground against a star-scattered void. Below, a smaller silver craft skims over a jagged lunar landscape, with Earth hanging luminous in the background. The composition layers cosmic scale against intimate adventurism, a classic Frank R. Paul-influenced visual grammar of wonder, speed, and interplanetary exploration rendered in vivid airbrush strokes.
A kinetic two-rocket composition with dramatic scale contrast — massive gleaming flagship versus tiny scout ship below — packs an entire interplanetary adventure into one frame. The jagged moonscape, luminous Earth, and gold-trimmed rocket design radiate classic pulp showmanship without tipping into chaos.
“144 PAGES NO ADVERTISING | Science Fiction QUARTERLY | No. 2 | WINTER ISSUE | A STIRRING 75,000 WORD NOVEL COMPLETE IN THIS ISSUE! | also GALLUN, WEINBAUM | 25¢”





