What does "no passes" mean on fandango?

What does "The First Fear Fandango" mean?

  • I'm reading "The First Fear Fandango" from Tim Cahill's book 'Jaguars Ripped My Flesh.' When I ask what "The First Fear Fandango" means, I don't mean the section in the book, but what the phrase itself means. He uses it in this context: "Well, the fact is, I've been doing a little sky diving lately, and when one learns to fly, when on begins to swoop and soar in the wind thousands of feet above the rolling, golden hills of California, then, by God, he's earned the right to Falconhood. Not that the first jump was all that graceful. That time Falcon dropped in a kind of terror, and he danced the first fear fandango." I have no idea what is meant by "the first fear fandango." Is this a reference to something? Is this a phrase people use? What does it mean exactly? Thank-you to anyone who is helpful! I really do appreciate it =] (P.S. I did try looking it up myself, but all I got were Bohemian Rhapsody lyrics)

  • Answer:

    may mean short stories

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