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The Story Of Ferdinand




''The Story of Ferdinand'' ( 1936 ) is a Children's Book by American writer Munro Leaf , his best-known work. It tells the story of a Bull who prefers to smell flowers rather than fight in Bullfights .

The book was released at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War , and so was seen by many supporters of Francisco Franco as a Pacifist book. It became a target of the Right Wing , being banned in many countries, and—perhaps because of that suppression—was promoted by many on the Left . It was banned in Nazi Germany , but was one of the few non- Communist books promoted in Soviet -occupied Poland .

Leaf is said to have written the story on a whim in an afternoon in 1935 , largely to provide his friend, illustrator Robert Lawson (then relatively unknown) a forum in which to showcase his talents.

The story was adapted by Walt Disney as a short animated film entitled ''Ferdinand the Bull'' in 1938 , in a style similar to his '' Silly Symphonies '' series (and sometimes considered an unofficial part of that series). ''Ferdinand the Bull'' won the 1938 Academy Award For Best Short Subject (Cartoons) .

Recently, pop punk band Fall Out Boy named their sophomore album '' From Under The Cork Tree '' after a phrase in the book.

Singer-songwriter Elliott Smith had a tattoo of Ferdinand the Bull, from the cover of Munro Leaf's book, on his right upper arm, which is visible on the cover of his record '' Either/or ''.


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