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Difference between revisions of "Gone with the Wind (book)"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
 
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{{Quote|Hey, what you reading there?|[[Clark Gable]]}}
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{{Quote|Oh, it's called "Gone with the Wind." You can have it. It's only got {{W|Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn|one swear word}}, and not a very good one.|[[Abraham Simpson|Little Abe Simspon]]}}
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{{Quote|"Gone with the Wind," eh? Well, let's see: garbage, garbage, my line. Garbage, garbage, my line. {{W|Burning of Atlanta|Atlanta burns}}, nice dresses. I like it! Thanks, kid. Don't tell this story to anyone for 60 years.|Clark Gable|Thursdays with Abie}}
 
{{Book2
 
{{Book2
 
|name = Gone with the Wind
 
|name = Gone with the Wind
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Having finished his shoe-shine, Gable gets up and starts reading, saying "garbage, garbage, my line" twice and then noting "the burns, nice dresses" before saying he liked it and jumping back onto the Tinseltown Starliner, thanking Abe and telling him not to tell the story for sixty years as the train pulls out.
 
Having finished his shoe-shine, Gable gets up and starts reading, saying "garbage, garbage, my line" twice and then noting "the burns, nice dresses" before saying he liked it and jumping back onto the Tinseltown Starliner, thanking Abe and telling him not to tell the story for sixty years as the train pulls out.
  
Many years later, Abe told the story to [[Marshall Goldman]], who put it in the ''[[Springfield Shopper]]''. [[Lisa]] read the article, which had Abe noting that Gable owed him a book and never paid for the shoe-shine, but his "big blue eyes" could melt your "lunch butter".
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Many years later, Abe told the story to [[Marshall Goldman]], who put it in the ''[[Springfield Shopper]]''. [[Lisa]] read the article, which had Abe noting that Gable owed him a book and never paid for the shoe-shine, but his "big blue eyes" could melt your "lunch butter".<ref>"[[Thursdays with Abie]]"</ref>
  
== Behind the Laughter ==
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A picture of the book was on a captcha screen for overrated fiction on the [[Wayz]] website. It was one of the pictures that [[Lisa]] clicked.<ref>"[[The Wayz We Were]]"</ref>
*''{{w|Gone With the Wind}}'' is a real book.
 
  
 
== Appearances ==
 
== Appearances ==
 
*{{ep|Thursdays with Abie}}
 
*{{ep|Thursdays with Abie}}
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*{{ep|The Wayz We Were|(picture)}}
  
{{Books}}
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== References ==
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{{Reflist}}
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== External links ==
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*{{Wikipedialink2|Gone with the Wind|novel}}
  
 
[[sv:Borta med vinden (Thursdays with Abie)]]
 
[[sv:Borta med vinden (Thursdays with Abie)]]

Latest revision as of 08:56, March 24, 2024

"Hey, what you reading there?"
Clark Gable
"Oh, it's called "Gone with the Wind." You can have it. It's only got one swear word, and not a very good one."
Little Abe Simspon
""Gone with the Wind," eh? Well, let's see: garbage, garbage, my line. Garbage, garbage, my line. Atlanta burns, nice dresses. I like it! Thanks, kid. Don't tell this story to anyone for 60 years."
―Clark Gable[src]
Gone with the Wind
Gone With the Wind (Thursdays with Abie).png
Book Information
Author: Margaret Mitchell
Genre: Romance
First appearance: "Thursdays with Abie"

Gone with the Wind is a book by Margaret Mitchell that Grampa gave to Clark Gable, who later starred in a a film adaptation as Rhett Butler. Scarlett O'Hara also appears in the book.

History[edit]

When Grampa was young he worked as a shoe-shine boy at Springfield Union Station. One day Clark Gable was his customer, having got off the Tinseltown Starliner to, as all the celebrities did, stretch their legs on the way to Hollywood. During their conversation, Gable noticed Abe had a book nearby and asked him what he was reading. Abe revealed it was Gone with the Wind, and gave Gable his copy of the book, pointing out it only had one ("not a very good") swear word in.

Having finished his shoe-shine, Gable gets up and starts reading, saying "garbage, garbage, my line" twice and then noting "the burns, nice dresses" before saying he liked it and jumping back onto the Tinseltown Starliner, thanking Abe and telling him not to tell the story for sixty years as the train pulls out.

Many years later, Abe told the story to Marshall Goldman, who put it in the Springfield Shopper. Lisa read the article, which had Abe noting that Gable owed him a book and never paid for the shoe-shine, but his "big blue eyes" could melt your "lunch butter".[1]

A picture of the book was on a captcha screen for overrated fiction on the Wayz website. It was one of the pictures that Lisa clicked.[2]

Appearances[edit]

References[edit]


External links[edit]