Of All The Gin Joints Quotes

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Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine…
Rick Blaine
Of all the gin joints in the world, she had to walk into mine Casablanca
Humphrey Bogart
Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine”,
Anupama Chopra (100 Films to See before You Die)
You want to hear something really sad?' I whisper. 'You're my best friend.' 'You're right. That is really sad.' Oliver grins. 'That's not what I meant.' 'Are we still playing True Confessions?' he asks. 'Is that what we're doing?' He reaches toward me and rubs a strand of my hair between his fingers. 'I think you're beautiful,' Oliver says. 'Inside and out.' He leans forward from the tiniest bit and breathes in, closing his eyes, before he lets the hair fall back against my cheek. I feel it inside me, as if I've been shocked. I don't pull away. I don't want to pull away. 'I... I don't know what to say,' I stammer. Oliver's eyes light up. 'Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walk into mine,' he quotes. He moves slowly, so that I know what's coming, and kisses me.
Jodi Picoult (House Rules)
He works fast," Alan commented as he lifted his wine. "David?" Shelby sent him a puzzled look. "Actually his fastest sped is crawl unless he's got a guitar in his hands." "Really?" Alan's eyes met hers as he sipped, but she didn't understand the amusement in them. "You only stood him up tonight, and already he's planning his wedding to someone else." "Stood him-" she began on a laugh, then remembered. "Oh." Torn between annoyance and her own sense of te ridiculous, Shelby toyed with the stem of her glass. "Men are fickle creatures," she decided. "Apparently." Reaching over, he lifted her chin with a fingertip. "You're holding up well." "I don't like to wear my heart on my sleeve" Exasperated, amused, she muffled a laugh. "Dammit, he would have to pick tonight to show up here." "Of all the gin joints in all the towns..." This time the laugh escaped fully. "Well done," Shelby told him. "I should've thought of that line myself; I heard the movie not long ago." "Heard it?" "Mmm-hmmm. Well..." She lifted her glass in a toast. "To broken hearts?" "Or foolish lies?" Alan countered. Shelby wrinkled her nose as she tapped her glass against his. "I usually tell very good ones. Besides, I did date David.Once.Tree years ago." She finished off her wine. "Maybe four.You can stop grinning in that smug, masculine way any time, Senator." "Was I?" Rising, he offered Shelby her damp jacket. "How rude of me." "It would've been more polite not to acknowledge that you'd caught me in a lie," she commented as they worked their way through the crowd and back into the rain. "Which you wouldn't have done if you hadn't made me so mad that I couldn't think of a handier name to give you in the first place." "If I work my way through the morass of that sentence it seems to be my fault." Alan slipped an arm around her shoulders in so casually friendly a manner she didn't protest. "Suppose I apologize for not giving you time to think of a lie that would hold up?" "It seems fair.
Nora Roberts (The MacGregors: Alan & Grant (The MacGregors, #3-4))
How I Got That Name Marilyn Chin an essay on assimilation I am Marilyn Mei Ling Chin Oh, how I love the resoluteness of that first person singular followed by that stalwart indicative of “be," without the uncertain i-n-g of “becoming.” Of course, the name had been changed somewhere between Angel Island and the sea, when my father the paperson in the late 1950s obsessed with a bombshell blond transliterated “Mei Ling” to “Marilyn.” And nobody dared question his initial impulse—for we all know lust drove men to greatness, not goodness, not decency. And there I was, a wayward pink baby, named after some tragic white woman swollen with gin and Nembutal. My mother couldn’t pronounce the “r.” She dubbed me “Numba one female offshoot” for brevity: henceforth, she will live and die in sublime ignorance, flanked by loving children and the “kitchen deity.” While my father dithers, a tomcat in Hong Kong trash— a gambler, a petty thug, who bought a chain of chopsuey joints in Piss River, Oregon, with bootlegged Gucci cash. Nobody dared question his integrity given his nice, devout daughters and his bright, industrious sons as if filial piety were the standard by which all earthly men are measured. * Oh, how trustworthy our daughters, how thrifty our sons! How we’ve managed to fool the experts in education, statistic and demography— We’re not very creative but not adverse to rote-learning. Indeed, they can use us. But the “Model Minority” is a tease. We know you are watching now, so we refuse to give you any! Oh, bamboo shoots, bamboo shoots! The further west we go, we’ll hit east; the deeper down we dig, we’ll find China. History has turned its stomach on a black polluted beach— where life doesn’t hinge on that red, red wheelbarrow, but whether or not our new lover in the final episode of “Santa Barbara” will lean over a scented candle and call us a “bitch.” Oh God, where have we gone wrong? We have no inner resources! * Then, one redolent spring morning the Great Patriarch Chin peered down from his kiosk in heaven and saw that his descendants were ugly. One had a squarish head and a nose without a bridge Another’s profile—long and knobbed as a gourd. A third, the sad, brutish one may never, never marry. And I, his least favorite— “not quite boiled, not quite cooked," a plump pomfret simmering in my juices— too listless to fight for my people’s destiny. “To kill without resistance is not slaughter” says the proverb. So, I wait for imminent death. The fact that this death is also metaphorical is testament to my lethargy. * So here lies Marilyn Mei Ling Chin, married once, twice to so-and-so, a Lee and a Wong, granddaughter of Jack “the patriarch” and the brooding Suilin Fong, daughter of the virtuous Yuet Kuen Wong and G.G. Chin the infamous, sister of a dozen, cousin of a million, survived by everbody and forgotten by all. She was neither black nor white, neither cherished nor vanquished, just another squatter in her own bamboo grove minding her poetry— when one day heaven was unmerciful, and a chasm opened where she stood. Like the jowls of a mighty white whale, or the jaws of a metaphysical Godzilla, it swallowed her whole. She did not flinch nor writhe, nor fret about the afterlife, but stayed! Solid as wood, happily a little gnawed, tattered, mesmerized by all that was lavished upon her and all that was taken away!
Marilyn Chin
Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine. All right, it wasn’t Casablanca and Violet and I weren’t exactly war-torn lovers reunited. We’d made out in my truck. Not exactly Bogie and Bacall caliber romance.
Callie Harper (Untamed (Heath & Violet))
Of all the gin joints in all the world, my dad had to be the first officer responding to Jack’s 911 call.
Gretchen McNeil (Relic)
He decried any nonalcoholic substitute, even water - because he reasoned "fish fuck in it.
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)
He had a stationary bike with a full bar just in front of it, which his girlfriend, Carlotta Monti, said "provided incentive.
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)
worry
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)
At the corner of the bar, a conversation rose in decibel, becoming animated. “Yo, Frank, take a look at what just walked in! Is it Christmas already? ‘Cause that sure is a pretty package.” “You got that right. . . . Wouldn’t mind unwrapping her bows.” Instinctively, Sean cast a glance over his shoulder and groaned in despair. The scene from Casablanca played in his mind. . .Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she had to walk into mine. This could not be happening. This was his turf, his town, his bar. She had no right to trespass. Okay, so this wasn’t Casablanca. This wasn’t Rick’s Café. Sam’s fingers weren’t summoning the haunting melody, “As Time Goes By,” from the ivories of an old upright piano. There weren’t any ceiling fans with long propeller-like blades slicing through thick clouds of cigarette smoke, nor were the voices that could be heard an exotic mélange of foreign languages and accents. But those differences were superficial, of no consequence. The only thing that really mattered was that Sean understood exactly how Bogie felt when his eyes lit on Ingrid Bergman. That terrible mix of bitterness, longing, and fury eating away at him. He groaned again. At the sound, the two men sitting at the corner of the bar broke off their conversation, eyeing Sean curiously. Just as quickly, they dismissed him and returned to their avid inspection. “Must be lost or confused. Palm Beach is twenty-five miles north.” “Let’s be friendly and give her directions. How ‘bout that, Ray?” “You frigging nuts? The only directions I’m giving her are to the slip where my houseboat’s moored.
Laura Moore (Night Swimming: A Novel)
The man wore a wide brim hat and his stubble was thicker than I remembered, but the swagger and the wool poncho were unmistakable. He sauntered over to the bar and squinted at me over the cigarillo that seemed to be permanently clenched between his teeth. I folded my arms and squinted back in response to his tough-guy act. “Of all the bars and all the gin joints in all the towns of Orloins, why do you keep coming to mine?” I hissed. “What are you doing here, Yojimbo?” “I was about to ask the same of you,’ he removed the cigarillo and pointed to my skirt with the lit end. “And in that outfit? I hardly expect that most soldiers in the king’s army’d be caught wearing a dress.
Dan R. Arman (The Maiden's Thorn)
There was a line in which Rick Blaine complained that of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, Ingrid Bergman had to walk into his. Luke had told him, “You can do a lot with a line like that.
Martin Turnbull (All the Gin Joints: A novel of World War II Hollywood (Hollywood Home Front trilogy Book 1))
Maybe by the time we’re done, Ilsa leaves Rick and Victor for a half-witted camel with lumbago and a yen for Swedish meatballs.
Martin Turnbull (All the Gin Joints: A novel of World War II Hollywood (Hollywood Home Front trilogy Book 1))
For Chandler it was all or nothing. Or, to hear one of his characters say it, “I’m an occasional drinker, the kind of guy who goes out for a beer and wakes up in Singapore with a full beard.
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)
She only gets stabby when she’s pie-eyed.
Martin Turnbull (All the Gin Joints: A novel of World War II Hollywood (Hollywood Home Front trilogy Book 1))
As my granny would say, your blood’s worth bottling.
Martin Turnbull (All the Gin Joints: A novel of World War II Hollywood (Hollywood Home Front trilogy Book 1))
You can’t drown yourself in drink. I’ve tried; you float.
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)
He would only confess to being drunk one time—it lasted “from the Spanish-American war to the New Deal.
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)
We have taken beauty and exchanged it for stilted voices.
Mark Bailey (Of All the Gin Joints: Stumbling through Hollywood History)