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Running with the Bulls: Fiestas, Corridas, Toreros, and An American's Adventure in Pamplona
 
 
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Running with the Bulls: Fiestas, Corridas, Toreros, and An American's Adventure in Pamplona [Hardcover]

Gary Gray (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 1, 2001
In Running with the Bulls, Gary Gray grabs hold of us and takes us on a grand and intimate tour of one of Spain's most passionate and historic cities. In 1926, Ernest Hemingway brought the frenetic charge of Pamplona's Festival of San Fermin to life in The Sun Also Rises. Today, that same energy still exists for the hundreds of thousands of people who descend upon the city every July. At the center of the celebration is the famous encierro - the running of the bulls. In this traditional event, thousands of thrill-seeking men and women race through the narrow streets of Pamplona just steps ahead of half a dozen angry bulls, each bread to kill and brandishing razor-sharp horns that can impale a victim in a split second. The goal of the corredores, the runners, is to usher the bulls into the Plaza de Toros where, that afternoon, each will meet his death under the sword of a torero, or bullfighter. (6 1/4 x 9 1/4, color photos)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Some days you skewer the bull, and some days the bull skewers you: this is one of the many useful lessons to be learned from Gary Gray's memoir of seasons spent in Pamplona, Spain, where life revolves around the rituals and realities of tauromachy.

Stockbroker and finance professor Gray caught the bullfighting bug twenty-odd years ago while vacationing in Spain, and swiftly advanced from rank turista to learned aficionado by, among other things, participating in (and surviving) Pamplona's famed "running of the bulls." For those interested in doing the same, he offers notes on how best to ensure emerging ungored and unscathed (walk the narrow course beforehand, he counsels, and "plan an escape route should you become a bull's bull's-eye"). Elsewhere he revels in other aspects of Spanish life, recounting travels throughout the country, impossibly rich meals, complicated political discussions, and all-night drinking sessions in the company of men and women who share his passion for the corrida.

Though no threat to Ernest Hemingway's classic Death in the Afternoon, Gray's book capably describes a most dangerous pastime--and some wonderful Spanish places. --Gregory McNamee

From Booklist

Written by a professor who has been visiting Pamplona for a couple of decades, this account won't change the mind of anyone who thinks running with the bulls is the epitome of craziness. Avoiding the poetic, Hemingway-influenced approach to bullfighting, Gray takes a more realistic tack. He describes Pamplona with the verve of a good travel writer, making us feel as though we are there ourselves, befriending the people, but he doesn't romanticize the bull run; in fact, he makes it clear that the experience of running with the bulls is more scary than poetic, as the many injured and mutilated participants can testify. Missing from the book, unfortunately, is any real examination of the vital question: Why, for crying out loud, would anyone want to deliberately step in the path of a charging, thousand-pound animal? Still, Gray offers a useful introduction to the history and culture of bullfighting and an evocative re-creation of the unique spectacle that is the Pamplona bull run. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 214 pages
  • Publisher: The Lyons Press; 1st edition (November 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585744077
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585744077
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 5.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #734,615 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ole, Gray, June 27, 2002
By 
Virginia A. Smith (State College, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Running with the Bulls: Fiestas, Corridas, Toreros, and An American's Adventure in Pamplona (Hardcover)
As a paradoxically resisting and admiring reader and teacher of Hemingway for many years, I opened Gary Gray's "Running with the Bulls" on a recent summer evening with a similar sense of ambivalence. Described to me earlier as "Under the Tuscan Sun on adrenaline," my post-read corrective of "Running with the Bulls" would be: "More like 'Under the Tuscan Sun' on testosterone"--and with far more passion, character, and heart than Francis Mayes' aesthetically gorgeous but rather icy treatise on Tuscany.

From the start, Gray displays a charming lack of self-consciousness about the ways in which his perennial quest for running with the Pamplona bulls in the July festival of San Fermin positions him as a Hemingway wannabe'. The author nods often and authentically to how Don Ernesto's "The Sun Also Rises," "Death in the Afternoon," and "The Dangerous Summer," motivated his own, original 1980 visit to Pamplona--and continues to inform his annual treks. Even so, the Hemingway intertextuality of "Running with the Bulls," never annoys. As Gray narrates twenty-two years of his own American adventures in Spain, the reader is rewarded with a retrospective animated by Gray's considerably unique sensibility. As these 17 or 18 separate pilgrimages to Pamplona from 1980-2001 weave together to form a single narrative tapestry about Spain, bullfighting, Pamplonese food and bar and folk culture, what impressed me was the distinctiveness Gray gives each vignette, often separated by many years. From the 1980 side trip to Tangiers with his then fiancee, Katie O'Toole, to the 2001 San Fermin's "next generation" running with the bulls with Gray's two oldest daughters, the reader is rewarded with lucidly recollected and deliciously described sensous detail. From the poppy fields and olive groves in the Sierra Nevada Mountains to the numerous three-hour Spanish dinner with cocktails, wine, lamb, bull stew, scallops, flan and coffee (no paella?), Gray treats each meal, each bullfight, each side-trip and conversation with old American and new Pamplonan friends, with rich reverance, delivering them to the reader not as narrative description but as the stuff of life.

Okay--so if this book has a flaw--and even the greatest of works does--it is the relentlessness of these details. By the second half of the book, without a larger personal tension or evolving historical, political, or social commentary to sustain them, the catalogues of bullfighting minutia, drinking escapades, and restaurant fare begin to function in the reader's imagination more as accounting ledgers than the rich layers of story-telling. But given how much the author is drinking and how little he is sleeping on this collage of separate trips, his ability to recall how a particular torero worked the bull in 1987, or the specific quality of a salty ham appetizer and rioja reserva wine in 1991, astounds and impresses. That said, the second half of the book often repeats rather than develops the themes of the travelogue's first part--at that point, I resisted the impulse to skim.

But his book is so much more that an American hedonist's journal of Pamplonan bullfighting and festivals. I deeply admired the spiritual structure of the work. If Hemingway's and Gray's bullfighting rings are existential metaphors for the passion of life and the terrible but noble inevitabiltiy of death, Gray shows himself by book's end as adept if secualr a metaphysician as he is a partyer. Punctuating twenty-some years of narrative revelry in this text is a well-narrated political assisination, the birth of Gray's six children and the deaths of many more bulls. The work ends with a bittersweet memento morti as Gray meditates on the death of an elderly restaurateur and a young and dashing torero--both of whom had lived with what Gray values supremely, lives, and gives as a significant gift to his reader in each page of "Running with the Bulls"--aficion.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Personal Journey Through Pamplona and it's Fiesta, October 14, 2002
By 
Rick Musica (Fort Lauderdale, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Running with the Bulls: Fiestas, Corridas, Toreros, and An American's Adventure in Pamplona (Hardcover)
Gary Gray paints a picture of what it is like to partake in Pamplona's Fiesta De San Fermin. From the moment the rocket goes off during the encierro, to the afternoon corrida, Gary manages to share his love for fiesta and especially the people who make fiesta so great. If you have been or are thinking of going to Pamplona, you should read this book. It is a great learning tool to acclimate yourself to Pamplona and fiesta. Gary also gives you an insight to some of the moments during fiesta when you need a break and shows you more of Pamplona and Navarra.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fun Read about an Exciting Festival, December 3, 2001
By 
DPG (Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Running with the Bulls: Fiestas, Corridas, Toreros, and An American's Adventure in Pamplona (Hardcover)
Running with the Bulls is definitely a fun book and a must read for anyone going to Spain or the Festival of San Fermin. The author takes us on a grand tour of Spain and introduces us to the bullfight and the encierro--where he runs only inches ahead of the 6 killer bulls and 8 steers through Pamplona's narrow cobblestone streets.

We can almost taste the rich Basque food and the sangria as the Festival takes place all around us. It's an easy read and there are 16 pages of color photos of the corrida, the run and the Festival. The book's epilogue is an informative guide that gives suggestions regarding how to run in the encierro.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Passion. Spain is steeped in passion. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
first encierro, local peñas, peña members, first sword thrust, president signals, toro bravo, three matadors, bull charges, six bulls, victory lap, first bull
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Fermin, Plaza del Castillo, Santo Domingo, Bar Nevada, Bar Txoko, Ortega Cano, San Sebastián, Maria Jesús, San Fermín, United States, Penn State, José Marl, Señor Paco, Plaza Consistorial, Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises, Basque Country, César Rincón, Ganadería de Sepúlveda, Joe Distler, Juan Antonio, Juan Mari, Mediterranean Sea, Parque de la Ciudadela, Bar Yoldi
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