Original post here. Sourced via divine-defilement. Original text:
Tag Archives: pulp art
Black dossier
Redhead imperilled
Original post here. Sourced on tumblr to coitusandcarnage via ghastlydelights. I have been unable to locate the artist, but the image appears to be a crop from cover art appearing on a magazine called SOS: Revista para adultos, relatos de mistera, fantasia, suspense, y terror. A blog called Trixie’s Treats provides the cover.
What lies beneath
Original post here. Image is a cover of Terror Tales and contains the text “House of Living Death, spine-tingling mystery novel by Arthur Leo Zagat. Dead Man’s Bride by Wyatt Blassingame. Hugh B. Cave, G.T. Fleming-Roberts, and other masters of eerie fiction!” Original text:
“Terror Tales” V. 1 #1 September 1934
Cat men, snake men, it’s all good
Original post here. Image is a cover of Dime Mystery Magazine and contains the text “Three blood-chilling mystery novelettes: The Corpoe Who Wouldn’t Die! by Stewart Stirling. Coming of the Cat-Men by William B. Cox. Master of the Graveyard Ghouls by Donald G. Cormack.” Sourced to pulpcovers.com.
Strung up and statuefied
Original post here. Image is a copy of a cover of Dime Mystery Magazine and contains the text “Coming of the Facelsss Killers: Thrill-packed mystery novel by Fancis James. Satan’s Pigmy Horde by John Hawkins.” Sourced via greatgrottu. Original text:
Dime Mystery Magazine (March 1938)
Scantily clad from the grave
Original post here. Image is a cover of Weird Tales and contains the text “Weird Tales: A magazine of the bizarre and unusual. A Rival from the Grave. Creeping horror! Weird terror! by Seabury Quinn. Paul Ernst. C.L. Moore, Robert E. Howard, August W. Derleth.” By its style I would guess the cover was painted by Margaret Brundage. Original text:
“Weird Tales” January 1936
Twin Terror Tales
Image is a cover of Terror Tales and contains the text “Terror Tales. Francis James is Back!! with a new, chill-packed novel, Bride of the Serpent. House of the Mummy Men: start, fascinating terror novelette by Edith & Ejler Jacobson.”
Image is a cover of Terror Tales and contains the text “Terror Tales. Slaves for the Wine Goddess: eerie mystery-thriller novelette by Russell Gray. The Monster is Hungry! by Wyatt Blassingame.”
Original post here. Original text:
“Terror Tales” March and July 1939
She looks…a bit concerned
Demon Seed
Original post here. Image is a cover of a paperback version of Dean Koontz’s Demon Seed, and bears the legend “For the first time in paperback…the prophetic novel of a profane and inhuman love.” Sourced on tumblr to olderoticart.











