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The Xenophobe's Guide to the Spanish

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The Xenophobe's Guide to the Spanish

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Description

Extracts from the book. Fun in the sun: Anyone attempting to understand the Spanish must first of all recognize the fact that they do not consider anything important except total enjoyment. If it is not enjoyable it will be ignored. You can't buy happiness: The happiness of the individual is considered to be much more important than money. The goatherd who strolls the countryside with his animals breathing in the fresh air and loving his problem-less life is much more admired than the wealthy industrialist who hasn't time to enjoy life and spends quite a lot of his earnings on medicines to calm his peptic ulcers.Sexplicit: In Spain lust is ever in the air. There is nothing about the Spanish appreciation of sex that is inhibited or restrained. It is accepted that both men and women love making love, which is why there are very few sexual crimes in the country. Drew Launay is the author of French for Xenophobes and Spanish for Xenophobes.

Author Biography:

Drew Launay first went to Spain in 1969 and did not understand the Spanish way of life at all. He went again in 1972 and understood it even less. In 1975 he married a fiery, foot-stamping, mad-as-a-sombrero Andalusian and had to understand it or die.Born in London of French parents, given an English education, finished in France, living in Spain and speaking three languages, he is the consummate European: one who finds no difficulty driving on either the left or right side of the road. Author of several stage plays, numerous BBC broadcasts on Spain and more than a dozen novels written under various pseudonyms and published in Denmark, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Poland and Czechoslovakia (that was), he goes to Rickmansworth for his holidays. Drew Launay now lives permanently in Nerja, East of Malaga, where he enjoys long siestas during the few empty days between official festivals. His favourite is on 16th June when the statue of the Virgin is taken to sea on a pleasure boat to bless the fish, and a giant papier mache sardine is paraded round the town on a hearse followed by a brass band playing a funeral march and mourners dressed in black. At sunset, the sardine is taken to the beach and burned along with the roasting of real sardines consumed by the happy crowd. He claims that no-one has yet come up with a reason for this other than that it's a great excuse for a fiesta.
Release date Australia
September 25th, 2009
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Edition
2nd Revised edition
Illustrations
black & white illustrations, maps
Pages
96
Dimensions
110x178x8
ISBN-13
9781906042486
Product ID
3646516

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