José Lins do Rego (born June 3, 1901, Pilar, Paraíba, Braz.—died Sept. 13, 1957, Rio de Janeiro) was a novelist of Brazil’s Northeastern school, best known for his five-book Sugar Cane Cycle, which described the clash between the old feudal order of plantation society and the new ways introduced by industrialization.
Lins do Rego grew up on a plantation, and the first work of the cycle, Menino de engenho (1932; “Plantation Boy”), is based on his own boyhood and family. It was followed in quick succession by Doidinho (1933; “Daffy Boy”), Bangüê (1934; “Old Plantation”), O moleque Ricardo (1935; “Black Boy Richard”), and Usina (1936; “The Sugar Refinery”). The first three volumes of the cycle were published in English translation as Plantation Boy (1966). The author returned to the plantation setting with Fogo morto (1943; “Dead Fire”), now considered to be his masterwork.
Having studied law, Lins do Rego briefly practiced in the 1920s and thereafter was a bank and tax inspector.