José Agustín (born August 19, 1944, Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico—died January 16, 2024, Cuautla, Morelos, Mexico) was a Mexican novelist whose prolific writings, reflecting an urban sensibility and the modern culture of youth, highlight urban violence and decay.
Agustín was educated at National Autonomous University of Mexico and at Centro Mexicano de Escritores. He was a leader of Onda, a youth movement sympathetic to rock music and drug culture, and his fiction reflects this involvement.
His first novel, La tumba (1964; “The Tomb”), published when he was 20, is told from a teenager’s viewpoint. Subsequent works include the prizewinning play Círculo vicioso (1974; “Vicious Circle”) and the award-winning novel Ciudades desiertas (1982; “Deserted Cities”). In 1985 Agustín published an autobiography, El rock de la cárcel (“Jailhouse Rock”); a collection of essays, La nueva música clásica (“The New Classical Music”); and the novels Ahí viene la plaga (“Here Comes the Plague”) and Furor matutino (“Morning Fury”). The novel Cerca del fuego (1986; “Near the Fire”) is a mordantly humorous indictment of life in Mexico City, told by an amnesiac after six years’ absence from the city. In 1994 Agustín published El viejo y el mar, a translation of Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea.