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"Return to Plain Awful" is a Donald Duck story that was originally printed during the Gladstone Publishing run of Donald Duck Adventures, issue #12 in May 1989. It was written by Don Rosa as a sequel to " Lost in the Andes! " by Carl Barks , to commemorate that story's 40th anniversary.
While Scrooge McDuck is having a dream, the Beagle Boys invade his dream, via a device stolen from Gyro Gearloose, in order to steal the combination to his money bin.Since it is extremely difficult for a dreamer to stop themselves from correctly answering questions posed to them in dreams (according to the in-story dream science), Donald Duck must enter his uncle Scrooge's dream to prevent ...
"The Once and Future Duck" is a 1996 Donald Duck story by Don Rosa. The title is a pun on T.H. White 's Arthurian novel The Once and Future King . The story was first published in the Danish Anders And & Co. #1996-21; the first American publication was serialized in Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #607-609, in January-March 1997.
Uncle Scrooge and Donald Duck: The Don Rosa Library is a series of books published by Fantagraphics Books, collecting all of the Scrooge McDuck and Donald Duck comic book stories written and drawn by Don Rosa, [1] originally published between 1987 and 2006.
The Duck Variations is a 1972 play by American playwright David Mamet. The play depicts a discussion taking place between two elderly men sitting on a park bench watching ducks. The dialogue begins with the mating habits of ducks and runs to examine law, friendship and death. The principal irony is that the men really know nothing about ducks.
Santa Ana – The Golden City [122] Santa Barbara – The American Riviera [123] Santa Catalina Island – The Island of Romance [124] Santa Cruz – (The real) Surf City, USA [125] Santa Monica. Dogtown [9] [8] Home of the Homeless [126] People's Republic of Santa Monica [126] [127] Soviet Monica [128] Santa Paula – Citrus Capital of the ...
Her short stories "Wildflower" and "Santa Ana" were included in The Best American Short Stories (1950 and 1960 editions) edited by Martha Foley. [5] Her poetry collection, Told in the Seed , won the Borestone Mountain Poetry Award in 1967 and her poem "Captive" from the Mitre Press Anthology , London won the Gold Medal Award in 1932. [ 6 ]
The strip follows the exploits of its title character, an anthropomorphic green-plumaged duck who works as a politically conservative reporter at fictional television station WFDR in Washington, D.C. Mallard's name is a pun on the name of the 13th president of the United States, Millard Fillmore.