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The Last British Bullfighter Paperback – Unabridged, 7 Aug 2009

4.4 out of 5 stars 13 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 296 pages
  • Publisher: Macmillan; Unabridged edition (7 Aug. 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0230743307
  • ISBN-13: 978-0230743304
  • Product Dimensions: 14 x 2.5 x 21.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 707,926 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

'The story of Frank Evans, known as "El Ingles" in the bullring. Four decades later, one perforated buttock and a quadruple heart bypass, Frank, 65 refuses to retire. Ole!' -- Daily Express

'What sets it apart are the powerful and often hair-raising experiences...It is an extraordinary tale.'
-- The Sunday Telegraph

Review

'What sets it apart are the powerful and often hair-raising experiences...It is an extraordinary tale.'

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Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Frank tells it as it is and how it was back in Salford in the 60s and 70s. Very easy reading and he has managed to change my feelings about Bullfighting.

The reason for the title is that he was my Driving Instructor (the car breaking down on the way to the Test didn't do anything for my nerves or confidence!). No-one since has believed me when I tell them that my Driving Instructor was a Bullfighter but now I can prove it by showing them his book. He is also the excuse I use as to why I like to drive big cars.........FAST.

Good luck to him for sticking to his guns or swords!
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Format: Paperback
"IT'S IMPOSSIBLE - AND WHAT'S MORE, IT'S NOT EASY"

This is the advice given to Frank Evans when he asked how to set about becoming a bullfighter. He ignored it, and followed his dream, and still continues to follow it to this day. In this book, he sets out in his own words the long, twisting path from butcher's son in Salford to successful matador de toros bravos. Along the way, he has had a variety of jobs and businesses, but ever since he identified his ambition to fight bulls, he has been faithful to that dream, in the course of which he has overcome enormous problems which would have made lesser men give it all up, and seek a quiet life.

What is it that drives a person to keep pile-driving through all the obstacles between them and a career in bullfighting? Frank describes it thus:
"But once you've tasted the thrill of a fighting bull gliding past in close proximity, smelt its sweet and overpowering odour and arrived at that moment of trust that comes when you know it is convinced in the muleta, then you are captured for ever. Bullfighting has got you then and it won't let go."

The writing is very straightforward and accessible, the style, conversational. You can hear Frank's voice speaking the words on every page in this book; it is an enjoyable and informative read.

Throughout the book, Frank gives useful explanations of the procedures followed in a corrida - obviously aimed at the layman - but what is interesting to the aficionado is that these descriptions are from the point of view of the matador, rather than the spectator.

A brief summary: Frank first heard enthusiastic tales about bulls from his father, Ralph, who was stationed in Gibraltar during the Second World War, and made visits to bullrings over the border in Spain.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
The unmentionable Ryan Giggs, coward, idiot, philanderer and footballist, thinks that this book is "as mad and funny as Frank himself", which is not a particularly good recomendation to put on the cover. The deranged scribblings of mad men aren't particularly enjoyable and in any case a footballist can hardly be expected to be in a position to make an informed recommendation.

Thankfully, I didn't know about the publisher's execrable lack of taste when I purchased this book online - I bought it on the strength of an interview with Mr. Evans on the ever-tasteful, erudite and educational Radio 4.

Giggs is either a liar, has trouble with the English language, or didn't bother to read the book. There's nothing mad about Evans, nor is it at all a funny book. Evans is passionate, perhaps. Eccentric maybe. Driven, certainly. Evans is also not a very good writer. Most biographies flow smoothly from sentence to sentence, paragraph to paragraph, and chapter to chapter. This one doesn't. It judders and jumps and pauses, but in doing so it mirrors real life. Real life is not a smooth progression, it is long periods in which nothing of note happens, just long slow change, punctuated by occasional shocks and memorable events. You get the distinct impression that Evans is telling the truth, because he clearly hasn't tried to construct a coherent easy-flowing tale. Bravo!

I really liked this book, and I recommend it. It gets dinged a couple of stars for the naïve writing style, for the publisher thinking that we're idiots who will go "Ooooooh, Ryan Giggs", and for a coupla minor points where Evans assumes that we know more about him than he's actually included in the book, and which an editor should have caught.
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Format: Paperback
A great read and a fascinating life story.

Frank Evans is a really self motivated and focussed man whose fascination with a 'taboo' topic amongst English people has been not prevented him in any way from becoming a fully fledged matador.

Each part of this book makes good reading and for me to read it on a Spanish holiday seemed so appropriate.

His knowledge of bullfighting is immense and he has not proved shy of putting his life on the line in order to fulfil what has been his central ambition in life.

Well worth the money although I am sure the 'politically correct brigade' will be horrified to hear of someone approving this fascinating book.
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Format: Paperback
Frank Evans is a man to be admired, not only for having the guts to take up the challenge of fighting bulls - it's in the blood - but to have overcome the huge obstacles for an Englishman in this profession ... and with no money. Foreign matadors have occasionaly been accepted, albeit grudgingly. Over the years there has always been a scattering of Mexican, Colombian, Venezuelan, Peruvian and now, increasingly, French matadors but they have had to fight extra hard to get on the bills in Spain, even with talent and money behind them. I tried in the '60s, got nowhere and quickly gave up. Friends like Chris Meagher (an Australian, later a successful lawyer) and Robert Ryan 'California' had more luck but eventually came up against the seedier behind-the-scenes entry difficulties which Frank describes so amusingly. This is two books in one. Mostly about Frank's life in and out of the ring yet containing the makings of another on its own about his friendship with footballer George Best when back in Manchester. It's OK to pack it in now, Frank. You can always come back.
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