Oops, sorry, wrong house.
Boy Loves Girl #47, by Lev Gleason
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
Oops, sorry, wrong house.
Boy Loves Girl #47, by Lev Gleason
While a “Space Jungle Western” may indeed be among Buster Crabbe’s “3 Greatest Adventures”, to the Blonde in a Red Dress it was just another Wednesday.
The Amazing Adventures of Buster Crabbe #2, by Lev Gleason
How nice, a helpful gentleman offers to lend a flashlight so the Blonde In A Red Dress isn’t stranded in the dark when her boyfriend’s car ran out of gas.
Boy Loves Girl #45, by Lev Gleason
There’s no reflection in the mirror! They’re vampires!
Boy Loves Girl #44, by Lev Gleason
Shame! That’s who was missing from the previous cover’s anthropomorphic personifications of evil and negativity!
Boy Loves Girl #38, by Lev Gleason
Sadly, the Nice Girl didn’t find herself a Nice Gil.
Boy Loves Girl #36, by Lev Gleason
How far can a girl go before her mistakes catch up with her? As far as Greenwich Village, apparently.
Lovers’ Lane #34, by Lev Gleason
“Could I Trust My Love?” That depends. How suspicious do you feel about his overzealous used-car-salesman grin?
Lovers’ Lane #33, by Lev Gleason
In retrospect, the Blonde in Red should have more closely monitored the fluctuating Bliss/Heartbreak-Disgrace exchange rate.
Boy Loves Girl #33, by Lev Gleason
The Blonde in Red is indecisive about who should die first and who should just be left for dead.
Crime And Punishment #59, by Lev Gleason