
Rocket Explosion Over Alien World – Science Fiction Quarterly Aug. 1952
A tumbling astronaut in a burnt-orange spacesuit reaches desperately toward the viewer as catastrophe erupts behind him — a sleek black rocket tears through a massive fireball, its hull splitting apart in a cascade of flame and debris. The explosion blooms in molten yellows and reds against the deep blue-black of space, while fragments of superstructure spin outward. A second figure falls helplessly in the lower foreground. This cover delivers pure Golden Age pulp spectacle: kinetic disaster painted with confident gouache bravado.
The cover commits fully to kinetic disaster — a rocket disintegrating through a sun-sized fireball while human figures tumble helplessly in the void. The ambition to convey simultaneous catastrophe, scale, and human peril in a single composition is quintessential peak pulp energy.
“SCIENCE FICTION Quarterly AUG. 25¢ 132 PAGES ALL THE ANSWERS by Rog Phillips ALL STORIES NEW No Reprints”





