Original post here. Original text:
wally wood
(via honey-rider)
Original post here. Sourced to wallywoodart.blogspot.com. Original text was my comment “World of Wally Wood, that is.
Original post here. Image is a comics panel which contains the caption “The food of the gods. The phrase ran through her mind as she saw Jorg absorbed — eaten alive — and digested. Could it be perhaps the ultimate fate of man?” I believe the artist is Wally Wood. Sourced to greedylittlepig via xxxelasetchbook.
Image is a cover of Weird Science (November-December 1953), found in this gallery at The Golden Age.
Image is a cover of Weird Science (July-August 1953), containin the text “Weird Science, No. 2 (July-Aug) In this issue E.C.’s adaptation of a story by Ray Bradbury, America’s top science-fiction writer” and the dialog balloon “Alone in space with fifty frozen dolls, just waiting to be thawed! Now let’s see! Eenie…meenie…miney…” Found in this gallery at The Golden Age.
Image is a cover of Weird Science (January-February 1953) and contains the text “Weird Science No. 17 Jan-Feb. 10¢. In this Issue: E.C.’s Adaptation of a story by Ray Bradbury, America’s top science-fiction writer!” Found in this gallery at The Golden Age.
Original post here. Image contains the text “An Earthman on Venus, by Ralph Milne Farley. Chapter I: When Myles Cabot accid
entally transmitted himself to the planet Venus, he found himself stranded on a mysterious world where every unguarded minute might mean a horrible death. Kept on the run by tiger-sized spiders, man-eating plants and dictatorial ant-men, Myles discovered the secret of the land — that humanity was a slave-race held in bondage by the monster ants. Called upon fro help by the beautiful princess Lilla, Myles shoed the monsters what an angry Earthman can do…” Original text:
Not so classic illustrated, based on a pulp novel written in 1926 called The Radio Man by Ralph Milne Farley Avon Publishing did a one shot adaptation of it in 1951 called An Earthman on Venus.
The art was by Wally Wood.