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
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
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
Oh my gosh! The Blonde in Red may have picked up a new recurring enemy: The gangster in a garish orange hat and lime green jacket!
America’s Best Comics #30, Pines
Here we discover that just below the surface of the Blonde in a Red Dress lurks the Blonde in a Plaid Shirt.
Northwest Mounties #3, St. John
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 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
Awww, that’s sweet. She brought flowers.
Justice Traps the Guilty #4, Prize Comics
Maybe the contract killers need to unionize so they can re-negotiate a better contract that includes overtime (plus paid holidays, sick days, and medical benefits.)
Headline Comics #29, Prize Comics
Secretly, the Blonde in a Red Dress worries that this relationship may not last. Workaholics who insist on bringing their work with them on vacations can be really hard on a marriage.
Justice Traps the Guilty v1 #2, Prize Comics
Apparently the contracts for gun molls can be leveraged as collateral, like bundled sub-prime mortgage loans.
Headline Comics #28, Prize Comics