It’s been awhile since I dipped into the Scientific Fiction of Amazing Stories. The Doom of Lun-Dhag caught my eye because Lundhags are an extremely comfortable walking boot for men who (ahem) unfairly put on weight despite the modest number of doughnuts eaten daily.
The story has nothing to do with walking boots unless you are thinking of trekking through the Himalayas. A mad Tibetan lama scientist with the Dalai Lama’s support (who knew what evil lurked within the heart of a Dalai Lama?) plans to conquer the world and impose Lamaism across the globe with biochemical missiles (hmm, that has an unfortunate ring about it). Can our two plucky American scientists stop them?
Teck Publications, Inc. | Editor : T. O'Conor Sloane, Ph.D.
Notes
Oct. 1932←Nov. 1932→Dec. 1932
Vol 7, No 8.
Library of Congress copyright record shows publication date 1932-10-10
Cover illustrates "Captain Brink of the Space Marines." Attributions for interior art taken from credits, or signature, whichever is more complete. Typo: Letter by John B. Michel, signed John O. Michel.
Page: 677
The Rotating Earth - essay by T. O'Conor Sloane, Ph.D.
Page: 678
The Doom of Lun-Dhag - by William Lemkin
Page: 679
The Doom of Lun-Dhag - interior artwork by Leo Morey
Page: 703
The Finger of the Past - by Miles J. Breuer, M.D.
Page: 704
The Finger of the Past - interior artwork by Leo Morey
Page: 708
The Man Who Lived Twice - by William Kober
Page: 708
The Man Who Lived Twice - interior artwork by Leo Morey
Page: 722
Captain Brink of the Space Marines - by Bob Olsen
Page: 723
Captain Brink of the Space Marines - interior artwork by Leo Morey
Page: 734
World of the Living Dead (Part 1 of 2) - serial by Ed Earl Repp
Page: 734
World of the Living Dead (Part 1 of 2) - interior artwork by Leo Morey
Page: 762
Discussions (Amazing Stories, November 1932) - essay by The Editor
Page: 765
Letter (Amazing Stories, November 1932) - essay by Neil R. Jones
Page: 768
Letter (Amazing Stories, November 1932) - essay by John B. Michel
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