Difference between revisions of "Simpsons Comics 196"
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
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|series= ''[[Simpsons Comics]]'' | |series= ''[[Simpsons Comics]]'' | ||
|pages= | |pages= | ||
− | |stories= | + | |stories= [[Wilde at Heart!] |
|company= [[Bongo Comics Group]] | |company= [[Bongo Comics Group]] | ||
|country= | |country= | ||
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'''''Simpsons Comics #196''''' is the one-hundred and ninety-sixth issue of ''[[Simpsons Comics]]'', that was released on November 21, [[2012]]. | '''''Simpsons Comics #196''''' is the one-hundred and ninety-sixth issue of ''[[Simpsons Comics]]'', that was released on November 21, [[2012]]. | ||
− | == | + | == Stories == |
+ | === ''[[Wilde at Heart!]]'' === | ||
{{desc|After going to a used book sale at the library, [[Homer]] and [[Lisa]] take some books to the [[Springfield Retirement Castle]], where [[Grampa]] read to them from The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde. However, without his missing glasses, Grampa's take on the Irish poet and playwright's fairy stories become truly wild indeed.}} | {{desc|After going to a used book sale at the library, [[Homer]] and [[Lisa]] take some books to the [[Springfield Retirement Castle]], where [[Grampa]] read to them from The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde. However, without his missing glasses, Grampa's take on the Irish poet and playwright's fairy stories become truly wild indeed.}} | ||
{{ComicsList}} | {{ComicsList}} | ||
[[Category:Simpsons Comics issues|196]] | [[Category:Simpsons Comics issues|196]] |
Revision as of 10:59, December 11, 2012
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{{ComicIssue |title= Simpsons Comics #196 |image= |released= November 21, 2012 |issue= |series= Simpsons Comics |pages= |stories= [[Wilde at Heart!] |company= Bongo Comics Group |country= }}
Simpsons Comics #196 is the one-hundred and ninety-sixth issue of Simpsons Comics, that was released on November 21, 2012.
Stories
Wilde at Heart!
- "After going to a used book sale at the library, Homer and Lisa take some books to the Springfield Retirement Castle, where Grampa read to them from The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde. However, without his missing glasses, Grampa's take on the Irish poet and playwright's fairy stories become truly wild indeed."