Unexpected early wake-up calls like this could be why The Blonde in a Red Dress is so cranky in the mornings.
Underworld v1 #2, DS Publishing
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
Unexpected early wake-up calls like this could be why The Blonde in a Red Dress is so cranky in the mornings.
Underworld v1 #2, DS Publishing
“Before I met Bob Martin, there were few men in my life…”
…yet after Bob Martin, it’s suddenly a “Honeymoon For Three”?
Thrilling Romances #6, Standard Comics
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
The Blonde in a Red Dress dials it up to 11 so her comic can be more than just a Western: it’s now even Westerner!
The Westerner Comics #14, Orbit
If by “quiet” you really mean “loud as a subway train”.
Manhunt #9, Magazine Enterprises
“It’s supposed to look like suicide but to me it’s murder!”
Yeah, but given how many crime scenes the Blonde in a Red Dress has been in the middle of, I wouldn’t be surprised if everything looks like murder to her by now.
Gangsters Can’t Win v1 #4, DS Publishing
“I took the road to stardom via love!”
Hollywood Pictorial Romances #3, St. John
Those boys are going to regret stumbling into the tension-filled coffee-shop showdown between the Blonde in a Red Dress and the Redhead in a Yellow Dress.
Wilbur Comics #20, MLJ
Diamonds are a space pirate swordswoman’s best friend!
Wonder Comics #17, Pines
Wait, who’s talking? What order is this dialog supposed to go in? This is why the Blonde in a Red Dress hates working with slackers who skip out on rehersals.
Exposed v1 #9, DS Publishing