Unusual Book-Length Novel
Queen Of Venus
by John Russell Fearn
The radio-vibration towers that surrounded this madman’s Utopia must quickly smash their plucky stratoplane, the disintegrator transforming their lovely golden-haired Eveta into a mass of electrons and energy — must long since have seen her Queen of Venus, but Hilt Read and Cranby Doyle still vowed never to witness a world robot-ruled, still vowed vengeance on this super-scientist who’d reduce all mankind to matter!
A Dictator For All Time — Novelet
by Raymond Z. Gallun
Here, then, was the final, the eternal Being — here was The Entity, the culmination of all scientific progress, with an inconceivably vast and complicated body comprising every element and compound that could exist, with a brain weighing well over a thousand tons!
The Man Who — Novelet
by A. Fedor and Henry Hasse
Had Dar Mihelson’s Time Traveller indeed crashed the barriers to the past? Would Dar Mihelson, the man, indeed be able to shake hands with Dar Mihelson, the boy?
Substitute For War — Novelet
by D.D. Sharp
Orillium, Cyrus Schultz named his radio-active principle that would completely wipe out all insects and disease, and the world called him the savior of humanity... Only Cyrus Schultz knew that actually he had doomed mankind to an inexorable and eternal hell!
The Thought-World Monsters — Short Story
by D.D. Sharp
Do our thought-images actually exist in the thought-world? — Speed Howell didn’t think so, and besides, he wasn’t interested in science!
Cycle — Short Story
by John L. Chapman
If momentary exposure to the cosmic rays beyond the Heaviside Layer made a super-man of an ordinary mortal — what fabulous titan of strength and intelligence might the human become who’d spend many hours under such forces!
The World Of Tomorrow — Marvel’s Special Feature
by Ray Cummings
What part will science play when the United States is invaded?... Can science create nothingness?... Why will motorists of the future prefer night driving? — MARVEL’S Sensational New Super-Science Department!
The Cover
by J.W. Scott