
Science Fiction Quarterly No.1 Summer 1940 – Planet Collision Cover
A planet is being torn apart — its crust cracking open in a catastrophic explosion of molten rock and superheated gas as a jagged, barnacled asteroid bears down from upper left. The Earth-like globe splits at the seams, continents visible on its rupturing surface, while a ringed planet looms in the dark void behind. This is cosmic annihilation rendered in lurid oranges and purples, the kind of end-of-the-world spectacle that made pulp covers impossible to walk past on a newsstand.
Oh man, they blew up an entire PLANET on the very first issue — no easing into it, just full cosmic catastrophe right out of the gate! The cracking globe with visible continents is an absolute chef's kiss of melodramatic pulp ambition.
“Science Fiction QUARTERLY 144 PAGES NO ADVERTISING 25¢ SUMMER 1940 NO. 1 SPACE-SHIP DERBY A New Novelet by MILTON KALETSKY A COMPLETE 75,000 WORD NOVEL IN THIS ISSUE Also PACKAGE OF POWER by D.C. COOKE”





