techhub.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A hub primarily for passionate technologists, but everyone is welcome

Administered by:

Server stats:

5.4K
active users

#pulpmagazine

9 posts9 participants1 post today

Fantastic Adventures vol. 1, no. 4 (November 1939)

Futuristic flying machine but it still has turbo-props, it's weird how the imagination only went so far.

I like how the artist had to include some kind of detail behind the skyscraper to make us understand it was being vaporised, not just turning blue.

Original magazine: archive.org/details/Fantastic_

Fantastic Adventures vol. 13, no. 12 (December 1951)

I love her and her very impractical dress (she didn't wake up this morning expecting to escape from giant clawed hands on a white horse) and the submerged heads are bonkers. This rings a bell, but I don't know if I've featured this one before. Anyone?

Original magazine: archive.org/details/Fantastic_

New Worlds Canadian Ed. vol. 9, no. 25 (September 1954)

OK where is the light coming from here? Reflected from Saturn? It's Saturn-shine? Seems unlikely.

I like the colours and the design though there's no real story here except "people explore place". Perhaps the most interesting thing is that it's the Canadian edition of the magazine?

Original magazine: archive.org/details/New_Worlds

Fantastic Films 10 September 1979 (September 1979)

This is fascinating. Whoever drew this had some kind of vague idea what the alien spaceship from "Alien" looked like, but maybe not an official one. Maybe they'd seen some clips or stills and reconstructed it from memory?

Original magazine: archive.org/details/Fantastic_

Uncanny Stories vol. 1, no. 1 (April 1941)

He looks terrified and determined, but she’s just mildly concerned. Excuse me Steve, would you mind awfully rescuing me from the flying octopus creature?

Learn to be assertive in the workplace without coming across as aggressive, young women. Or, you know, overthrow the patriarchy.

Original magazine: archive.org/details/UncannySto