
Fantastic Adventures Oct 1940s 'Witch of the Andes' Fantasy Cover with Giant Nymph
Surprisingly sensual for mainstream newsstand fare, this cover features a colossal golden-haired nude nymph emerging from a rainbow-lit waterfall, her impossible scale dwarfing the sword-wielding fairies and cloaked figures scrambling at her feet. The lush Andean jungle setting, complete with iridescent butterflies and mossy rockfaces, frames a scene that blurs pulp fantasy, mythology, and barely-veiled pinup art — a combination that Fantastic Adventures perfected with gleeful shamelessness throughout the 1940s.
A towering nude goddess, sword-wielding fairies, a rainbow, and Richard S. Shaver — the man who invented hollow-earth paranoia — all on one cover for 25 cents. The 1940s were doing just fine.
“Fantastic Adventures and OCTOBER 25¢ Witch of the Andes by RICHARD S. SHAVER”





