Thursday 21 February 2013

Hemingway Bull Fighting

Hemingway Bull Fighting Details
Mr. Hemingway as an authority on bull-fighting should not be a surprise to any one who has read the passages in "The Sun Also Rises" which touch upon that peculiarly Latin sport. That he is an authority may be conceded, even by those who have never seen a matador, not only from Mr. Hemingway's statement that he has seen fifteen hundred bulls killed on the field of honor and his acknowledgment of indebtedness to some 2,077 "books and pamphlets in Spanish dealing with or touching on tauromania," but from the internal evidence of the book itself. One would say that Mr. Hemingway knows bull-fighting at least as well as the specialized sports writer in our own country knows baseball, football, racing or fighting. He knows it so well that on occasion only the introduction of an extremely singular old lady as the author's interlocutor, a few digressions on death, modern literature and sex life, joined with Mr. Hemingway's extremely masculine style of writing, save the reader from drowning in a flood of technicalities.
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting
Hemingway Bull Fighting

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