Bill Hillmann, 32, was
gored by a bull that got separated from the other five bulls -- toward
the end of the 850 meter, or half-mile, course -- just before the
downhill slope leading into the bull ring.
" 'It's been a hell of a
sh**ty fiesta so far,' " Hillmann said at the hospital, according to his
friend Alexander Fiske-Harrison, who edited their new e-book entitled
"Fiesta, How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona."
Other contributors to the book include John Hemingway,
grandson of Ernest Hemingway, who brought global fame to the ancient
tradition through his 1920s novel, "The Sun Also Rises," also published
under the title, "Fiesta."
Hillmann has been running
in Pamplona for about a decade, and in the book on surviving the
running, he wrote a key chapter offering detailed advice for novices and
experts alike on how to properly run with the bulls.
It includes this
description: "There's more to the ancient tradition than just surviving
it. At its most pure, this is daring street-art, a dance with death and
majesty, a chance to come into harmonious contact with one of nature's
fiercest monsters."
Hillmann continued in the
book: "At its worst, it's a bunch of panicked tourists falling all over
each other in an idiotic stampede."
And Hillmann himself may
have gotten tripped up by a mini-stampede, said fellow book contributor
Jim Hollander, a veteran photographer, by phone from Pamplona.
Some other runners apparently fell in front of him, and then Hillmann lost his balance, Hollander said.
Photographs from the scene show Hillmann on the pavement, on his back, when the bull's horn goes into his leg.
Fiske-Harrison said he
was running on Wednesday near Hillmann and that the latter was trying to
guide the loose bull -- which experts consider to be very dangerous --
toward the bull ring, when he got gored.
The hospital medical
report said Hillmann received two gorings, but Fiske-Harrison said there
appeared to be only one main one, which he described as a "clean wound.
It didn't touch a bone or an artery. This is an honorable wound."
He estimated it to be about a 15 to 20 centimeter gash.
Hillmann's wife went to hospital to see him and Fiske-Harrison and Hollander said she was not pleased.
Hillmann, who was in
Spain to promote his new novel, "The Old Neighborhood," about Chicago,
had just days ago suffered the loss of his passport and laptop,
Fiske-Harrison said. Hillmann mentioned it on his Facebook page.
Hillmann remained alert
at hospital, although he was sedated, and is expected to spend about
four days there before he is released, Fiske-Harrison said.
The six half-ton bulls
from Victoriano del Rio ranch, including the one that gored Hillmann,
were due to die in the bullfights on Wednesday afternoon, near where he
was injured on the third day of the annual eight days of running, held
at 8 a.m. local time, from July 7 to 14.
On the first three days
of running this year, 13 people have been taken to hospital, three for
goring-related injuries, and the rest having been hurt in falls or
collisions.
There have been 15
deaths among runners since records began in 1924, most recently in 2009
when a 27-year-old Spanish man was fatally gored in the neck.