Dell Books 16149 – Kilgore Trout – Venus on the Half-Shell
Kilgore Trout – Venus on the Half-Shell
Dell Books 16149, 1975; reprint 1978
Cover Artist: Cadino
Kilgore Trout is a pseudonym of Philip José Farmer
Venus on the Half-Shell is a science fiction novel by Philip José Farmer, writing pseudonymously as “Kilgore Trout,” a recurring fictional character in many of the novels of Kurt Vonnegut. This book first appeared as a lengthy fictitious “excerpt”—written by Vonnegut, but attributed to Trout—in Vonnegut’s God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater (1965).
7 notes
·
View notes
What if I was a scientist, and you were an alien, and we were both...girls...
My contribution to the "And They Were Monsters" zine! This got to be a print for backers for the Kickstarter :]
679 notes
·
View notes
when hockey players have hobbies outside hockey it's always like, pop songs on the acoustic guitar or the same video games they've been playing since juniors or cooking something slightly fancier than eggs. learn to knit for god's sake
725 notes
·
View notes
Basil Wolverton
540 notes
·
View notes
415 notes
·
View notes
Perry Rhodan no 426, October 1969.
Art by Johnny Bruck
309 notes
·
View notes
Ed Emshwiller cover art for Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1956.
(Heritage Auctions)
379 notes
·
View notes
Karel Thole (1914-2000) - The Old Man of Serpents
original cover art for Urania #430, 1966
267 notes
·
View notes
The Biological Revolt - art by Frank R. Paul (1953)
855 notes
·
View notes
232 notes
·
View notes
The Tattooed Man
https://pulpcovers.com/the-tattooed-man/ Covers, Full Issue, Imaginative Tales, Magazine, Malcolm Smith (the artist), Sci-Fi.
1 note
·
View note
Desert Ranger by Anndr Pazyniuk
734 notes
·
View notes
“YOU ARE A ROBOT!” The End. (Tomb of Terror Vol 1 13,1954)
1K notes
·
View notes
My variant cover for issue four of the excellent new series Cemetery Kids Don’t Die! Out in May from Oni Press.
111 notes
·
View notes
I find the Thousand Sons so compelling, especially during the heresy. In a weird way I cant help but connect them to my own experiences with being trans.
Look at Magnus and his legion. Loyal to a fault. They deluded themselves into believing that the empire they were building, a fascist hellhole that hated people like them, would make an exception. They were one of the good ones. And yet, like anyone could have predicted, they were cast aside and expected to do nothing as they and their culture was erased and censured.
And the most tragic thing is the Magnus that was so arrogant in his own superiority, the Magnus so desperate to prove that his and his son's otherness was valid was ready to not just embrace but ensure the oblivion his father called for. Even despite his vocal outcry against the subjegation of those like him he had internalized the fears everyone around him espoused.
249 notes
·
View notes