
Original post here. Sourced to blackoutraven via erotiterrorist.
Author Archives: faustus
The Octopus appears mightier than the knife

Original post here. Sourced to mr-sandman-29. Original text:
Tentacle Lust
Fantasy Illustrated

As is evident, this is the cover from Fantasy Illustrated #6. According to this blog post, Fantasy Illustrated was an early comics fanzine published by Bill Spicer in the 1960s. Issue #6 was published in 1966 and features cover art by D. Bruce Perry according to this site, which also lists more contents of the ‘zine.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Jewels in the horde

Original post here. Sourced to raiseshipseerve via venusrbecky.
Our man in Italy exposes…

Original post here. Image contains the text “The National Insider. Special Weekly Feature 15ยข. Informative, Provocative, Fearless, Entertaining. Black Power and Soul Brothers…See Page 7. Our Man in Italy Exposes a L.S.D. Sin Club. Elivra — one of the club’s more persuasive recruiters. The ‘uncensored’ photo racket.” Sourced to modrules via greatgrottu.
Public auction


Second image contains the text “Slave girls were imported and sold at public auction.” According to a pair of posts ( 1 2 ) on the Drake’s Way tumblr, these are two parts (perhaps appearing on facing pages) of an illustration by James Meese for a story called “The Wantons Who Ruined a Nation”, appearing in For Men Only magazine in April 1955.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Siren

Original post here. Sourced to bulletproof2k.
Tentacle throne

Original post here. Sourced to bulletproof2k.
Raging Sex Monster!

According to the Drake’s Way tumblr, this is an advertisement that appeared in Horror Sex Tales #1, advertising Monster Sex Tales #1 “by” infamous director and author Ed Wood Jr. According to this forum post, Wood wrote at least three of the stories appearing in Monster Sex Tales #1; another site claims that Horror Sex Tales #1 was also “apparently written and edited entirely by Ed.” (An article at BadMags credits him with work for both publications, but also goes into detail about the difficulties with attributing Wood’s prolific magazine writing.) Both magazines were published by Gallery Press in 1972. This site claims that two stories in Monster Sex Tales were “partly cannibalized from The Adult Version of Frankenstein by Hal Kantor”, which may explain the theme of the advertisement art. However, The Adult Version Of Frankenstein appears to have been an adult novelistic treatment, not described in catalogs as having associated artwork. No information could be discovered about the magazine artist who drew the advertisement.
The advertising copy reads:
“Frankenstein, Raging Sex Monster! See the famous Frankenstein monster rage a lust-frenzied path across the pages of the most shockingly strange magazine to come to you in ages!! MONSTER SEX TALES!! A startling collection of tales about the half-man/half creature of book and movie fame — exciting and diverse interpretations by astute writers of today — guaranteed to keep you pinned solidly to your chair as you read from cover to cover!! Each story is illustrated in art and photos — and is definitely for the sexually-oriented reader!! You’ll find your collector’s first-edition copy of MONSTER SEX TALES at the same magazine stand that brings you WEIRD and HORROR SEX TALES.”
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Uses for nipples


Original post here. Original text:
Mihai Criste