The following year saw sales increase to 68,000 and by 1938, the book was selling at 3,000 per week. The book's first run by Viking Press in 1936 sold 14,000 copies at $1 each. Ferdinand is then taken back to his pasture, where to this day he is still sitting under the cork tree happily smelling flowers. However, he is delighted by the flowers that the ladies throw in the ring and sits down in the middle of the ring to enjoy them, upsetting and disappointing everyone and making the matador and other fighters throw tantrums. Mistaking Ferdinand for a mad and aggressive bull, the men rename him "Ferdinand the Fierce" and take him away to Madrid.Īll of Madrid, including many beautiful ladies, turn out to see the handsome matador fight "Ferdinand the Fierce." When Ferdinand enters the bull ring, he is faced with the matador, banderilleros and picadors who panic when they see him. Upon getting stung as a result, he runs wildly across the field, snorting and stamping. Ferdinand is again on his own, sniffing flowers, when he accidentally sits on a bumblebee. One day, five men come to the pasture to choose a bull for the bullfights. All the other bulls dream of being chosen to compete in the bullfights in Madrid, but Ferdinand still prefers smelling the flowers instead. His mother is concerned that he might be lonely and tries to persuade him to play with the other calves, but when she sees that Ferdinand is content as he is, she leaves him alone.įerdinand grows to be the biggest bull in the herd and he often spends time alone. Young Ferdinand does not enjoy butting heads with other young bulls, preferring instead to sit under a cork tree smelling the flowers.
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