Damon Runyon: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* ''[[Film/Little Miss Marker|Little Miss Marker]]'', an early hit for [[Shirley Temple]].
* ''[[Film/Little Miss Marker|Little Miss Marker]]'', an early hit for [[Shirley Temple]].


=== Damon Runyon's stories provide examples of: ===
{{creatortropes|Damon Runyon's stories provide examples of:}}

* [[Big Eater]]: Nicely-Nicely Jones in "A Piece of Pie".
* [[Big Eater]]: Nicely-Nicely Jones in "A Piece of Pie".
{{quote|He is a horse player by trade, and eating is really just a hobby, but he is undoubtedly a wonderful eater even when he is not hungry.}}
{{quote|He is a horse player by trade, and eating is really just a hobby, but he is undoubtedly a wonderful eater even when he is not hungry.}}

Revision as of 19:27, 8 September 2014

/wiki/Damon Runyoncreator

Now one time it comes on Christmas, and in fact it is the evening before Christmas, and I am in Good Time Charley Bernstein's little speakeasy in West Forty-seventh Street, wishing Charley a Merry Christmas and having a few hot Tom and Jerrys with him.

Damon Runyon (1880 – 1946) is an American journalist and author, best known for his short stories about the colorful gamblers, gangsters and hustlers of New York in the early part of the twentieth century. His stories are narrated in the first person by an anonymous narrator with a distinctive slang-laced style that avoids past and future tense.

Notable adaptations of Runyon stories include:

Damon Runyon's stories provide examples of:
  • Big Eater: Nicely-Nicely Jones in "A Piece of Pie".

He is a horse player by trade, and eating is really just a hobby, but he is undoubtedly a wonderful eater even when he is not hungry.