Juan Carlos Onetti (born July 1, 1909, Montevideo, Uru.—died May 30, 1994, Madrid, Spain) was an Uruguayan novelist and short-story writer whose existential works chronicle the decay of modern urban life. The protagonists of his novels lead unhappy, isolated lives in an absurd and sordid world from which they can escape only through memories, fantasies, or death.
Onetti studied at the university in Buenos Aires and held various jobs before he started writing. His first published work, the novella El pozo (1939; The Pit), treats the aimless life of a man lost within a city where he is unable to communicate with others. The book’s complex fusion of reality with fantasy and inner experience makes it one of the first distinctively modern Spanish American novels. In the novel Tierra de nadie (1942; No Man’s Land) Onetti again presents a nihilistic view of city life devoid of any spiritual meaning.
Onetti lived in Buenos Aires from 1943 to 1955, working as a journalist. In his best-known novel, La vida breve (1950; A Brief Life), he creates the mythical city of Santa María, which is also the setting of several subsequent novels. The book’s unhappy narrator fantasizes about living as another person but always encounters the same emptiness and helplessness that drove him to escape into fantasy in the first place. This book, too, was technically innovative in its interweaving of fictions upon fictions as the main character’s personality progressively disintegrates.
Onetti returned to Montevideo in 1955 and two years later was named director of the city’s municipal libraries. In his next major novel, El astillero (1961; The Shipyard), an antihero named Larsen returns to Santa María to try to revive a useless and abandoned shipyard, ending his life in futility and unheroic defeat. The book has been viewed as an ironic allegory reflecting the decay and breakdown of Uruguayan society. The novel Juntacadáveres (1964; Body Snatcher) deals with Larsen’s earlier career as a brothel keeper and his concomitant loss of innocence.
Onetti’s collections of short stories include Un sueño realizado y otros cuentos (1951; “A Dream Fulfilled and Other Stories”) and El infierno tan temido (1962; “The Most Feared Hell”). His Obras completas (“Complete Works”) were published in 1970, and his Cuentos completos (“Complete Stories”) appeared in 1974.