Allison went on to major in advertising at the Paier College of Art in Hamden, Conn. There she also met her future husband, illustrator Romas Kukalis. After graduation, they moved to Manhattan to pursue their careers, which, for Allison, was a dreary exercise in retail and catalog advertising.
The couple eventually returned to Connecticut, where Allison worked as advertising copy chief for a department store chain before moving to The Hartford Courant as an artist and designer. During this time, she won the first of several awards for her work. She also created her first published comic strip, "Friends Fatales," which appeared in several weeklies and in special sections of the Courant.
Allison has written and illustrated two children's books, "The Artist's Model" and "The Artist's Friends" (Carolrhoda, Inc.). Thrilled as she was, she returned to her true passion - comic strips.
"PreTeena" was born when Allison rediscovered, in a pile of papers, a children's book idea she'd developed. She thought it would make a good comic strip, and Universal Press Syndicate agreed, launching "PreTeena" in 2001.
Allison's greatest comic strip influences have been "Peanuts," "B.C.," "Andy Capp," "Doonesbury," "Calvin and Hobbes" and the brilliant panel cartoonists in The New Yorker and Playboy.
The cartoonist and her husband and two children, Alexandra and Guyon, live in Keene, N.H.