The Supersonic Phallus
by Steven Key Meyers
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Pub Date Aug 12 2025 | Archive Date Jan 31 2026
Steven Key Meyers | Smash-and-Grab Press
Description
When cub reporters Dean and Sam of the Sinai, Colorado Sentinel investigate UFOs seen over Two-Mile Mesa, they have no idea of what they’re about to face—or of what they’ll end up doing. The time is July 1947—the great flying-saucer scare, when thousands of Americans suddenly report seeing UFOs over every part of the country.
Dean is gay, but Sam (our narrator) is decidedly not! But as they interview witnesses and maintain high-altitude stakeouts, Sam begins to fall in love with Dean. Are the UFOs to blame? Is Dean merely the handsomest man Sam’s ever seen, or a space alien? And are the UFOs actually Russian aircraft out to steal U.S. atomic secrets?
The Air Force sends P-51 Mustang fighters to shoot down Sinai’s aerial invaders, even as the Government insists people are just seeing weather balloons. But one night, after a veritable supersonic phallus streaks overhead, Dean and Sam risk everything to let the world know the truth.
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9798985021578 |
PRICE | $9.95 (USD) |
PAGES | 148 |
Links
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews

In The Supersonic Phallus, Steven Key Meyers has a good time exploring the UFO craze of 1947...and the ways in which it can serve as a metaphor about queerness in post-War America. It makes for an interesting, quick read, and its brevity ensures that the story (and metaphor) don't overstay their welcome.

This was definitely a good read.
It was short but a really good read I thought.
Ufos and aliens are my kind of thing .

The unexplainable phenomena operating in the skies of Sinai, Colorado mirror what’s happening in the heart of our main character, Sam, as he struggles to understand and accept his own queer identity in an era of deep closets and discretion.
The Supersonic Phallus is a quick but complex read, well-suited for fans of 1940s period pieces. It’s equal parts investigative journalism, humor, and heartbreak.
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