Mateo Alemán (baptized September 28, 1547, Sevilla, Spain—died c. 1614, Mexico) was a Spanish novelist, a master stylist best known for his early, highly popular picaresque novel, Guzmán de Alfarache.
Descended from Jews who had been forcibly converted to Catholicism, Alemán expressed many aspects of the experiences and feelings of the New Christians in 16th-century Spain. His most important literary work, Guzmán de Alfarache (1599; a second part, 1604; Eng. trans., The Spanish Rogue, 1622, 1924), which brought him fame throughout Europe but little profit, is one of the earliest picaresque novels; it was subsequently published under various titles. The first part ran through many editions, almost all pirated; even before he could finish the second part, a spurious sequel had appeared. Alemán’s life, in many ways like that of his protagonist, Guzmán, was afflicted with severe economic and personal reverses. He was the son of a prison doctor and studied medicine at Salamanca and Alcalá for four years after graduating from the University of Sevilla (Seville) in 1564, but he never practiced. In 1580 he was imprisoned for debt. Only after he emigrated to Mexico in 1608 did his fortunes become settled and his life stable.