HELP! The Interocitor Has De-Coupled From the
Non-Synchronous Fribulator!
If anyone can offer some help with converting my blog from WordPress.com to WordPress.org (hosted on my own site) I’d appreciate it. I’m a non-CMS, non-PHP, non-CSS kind of person and I seem to be having some difficulties with: modifying the page template, adding widgets and transferring both comments and links from the old site (here) to the new one.
I will gladly plug you/your services for a suitable period.
I need to take this blog to the next level – ad support, pinging of technorati and other traffic-increasing services & etc.
In the meantime – I’ll keep posting here.
And now -
THE TOP TEN COOLEST
SF PULP MAGAZINE
SPACESHIPS
I love spaceships. Find me a science fiction fan who doesn’t. Such a creature does not exist.
Next to B.E.M.s, rayguns and scantily clad women in peril (there’s a new SF acronym for you – SCWIPs!), spaceships are about as iconic as you can get.
I went through a lot of agony whittling this list down to just ten. I could have put a hundred up here and still had some left over, but whittle I did. Not enough to get down to only ten though, so I had to break things up into a Pre-’50s Top Ten and a Post-50′s Top Ten (TWO top ten lists for the price of one) and here they both are, starting in chronological order:
The Top Ten (Pre-1950) COOLEST SF Pulp Magazine Spaceships -
The FIRST death star. Proportionally about the same size too. Hmmmm.
Pretty – and note the ship’s name – ferryman of the styx. (The scale is revealed by the astronaut walking ON the hull.)
I love the sense of scale in this cover. The robot isn’t too bad either.
You simply CAN NOT talk about spaceships without at least one mention of the Skylark – the worlds first interstellar cruiser!
I featured this cover in my Pulp Comic Fairy Tale. Obviously it has made an impression. I think there are two elements that do it for me – first, the sheer size of the ship itself and second, the contrast of this enormous space liner dwarfed by the starfield behind it.
No gallery of pulp cover spaceships is complete without a CRASHED spaceship. I like the detail of the grave and the angled escape ladder.
I loved this image the minute I set eyes on it. This is, in fact, the cover for the first pulp I ever purchased. Nearly 70 years later the colors are just as vibrant as the day it first hit the stands.
What are spaceships for but to escape the dying Earth (or colonize new worlds)? This issue of Startling is most notable for the appearance of Weinbaum’s first (and most famous) story.
I like how over-sized the lions on the left are. I guess the people up front don’t have tickets.
I think this cover appeals because the story it depicts is one of my all time favorites – THE seminal tale of our first contact with an alien species. Which of the two ship’s do you think is the Terran one?
This is such a pulpy spaceship. The sense of power, and the sense of wonder come right through.
Later today – Post 1950s Spaceship covers.









