José Rubén Romero

Mexican author
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Quick Facts
Born:
Sept. 25, 1890, Cotija de la Paz, Mex.
Died:
July 4, 1952, Mexico City (aged 61)

José Rubén Romero (born Sept. 25, 1890, Cotija de la Paz, Mex.—died July 4, 1952, Mexico City) was a Mexican novelist and short-story writer whose vivid depiction of the people and customs of his native state of Michoacán brought him critical acclaim as an outstanding modern costumbrista, or novelist of manners. His character Pito Pérez, a lovable rascal, won the hearts of a wide audience.

In his youth Romero participated in the rebellion (1910–11) led by Francisco Madero, and his later diplomatic career included service as ambassador to Brazil (1937) and to Cuba (1939). Romero began his literary career as a poet with Fantasías (1908; “Fantasies”) and La musa heroica (1912; “The Heroic Muse”). Soon, however, he turned almost exclusively to prose. With broad humour that often masked an underlying bitterness, Romero depicted the post-revolutionary milieu in such novels as Desbandada (1934; “Disbandment”) and Anticipación a la muerte (1939; “Anticipation of Death”). He achieved his greatest popularity, however, with La vida inútil de Pito Pérez (1938; “The Useless Life of Pito Pérez”), a picaresque novel chronicling the comic adventures of Pito Pérez, who reappeared in Algunas cosillas de Pito Pérez (1945; “Some Little Things About Pito Pérez”).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.