It was a dark and stormy knight. Suddenly, a shot rang out!
Bobby Benson’s B-Bar-B Riders #18, by Magazine Enterprises
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
It was a dark and stormy knight. Suddenly, a shot rang out!
Bobby Benson’s B-Bar-B Riders #18, by Magazine Enterprises
The Blonde in a Red Dress gets really upset if you try to cut in line for the ATM at Wells Fargo.
Western Crime Busters #7, Trojan
Yup, nothing says “Cowgirl Romance” like a Blonde in a Red Dress bludgeoning her attackers with a white-hot branding iron.
Cowgirl Romances #8, Fiction House
Not sure of the reasoning for the odd choice of cover concept, other than for the Blonde in Red to help confirm that Boone Marlowe is NOT actually a vampire trying to sneak in from a horror comic.
Outlaws v1 #9, DS Publishing
Put those guns away before someone loses an eye!
Cow Puncher #6, Avon
The Blonde in a Red Dress was content with the rootin’-tootin’ cheerful cowboy ranch from yesterday, but no, her brother had to keep looking for a more “authentic” Wild West family vacation experience.
Western Thrillers #6, Fox Features
Why no, this isn’t an exaggeratedly fake cowboy ranch designed solely as a tourist trap for naive city slickers, why do you ask?
Winnie Winkle #6, Dell
Looks like the Blonde in a Red Dress is bundled back up all warm and cozy after her mixup with the Northwest Mounties.
Rangeland Romances v46 #1, Popular Publications
The Blonde in a Red Dress may have played the damsel in distress yesterday, but she was evidently an undercover gun moll (or the nearest Old West equivalent.)
Outlaws v1 #3, DS Publishing
Horror, Romance, and now Westerns? The ever-versatile Blonde in a Red Dress proves she’s not just a one-trick-pony.