Born Oct. 4, 1853, in Entralgo, Asturias; died Feb. 3, 1938, in Madrid. Spanish author and critic. Member of the Spanish Academy from 1906.
Palacio Valdés was the author of articles on Spanish literature, many of which were published in the collections Literary Portraits(1878) and Literature in 1881 (1882, together with L. Alas y Ureña). In prose, he continued the traditions of costumbrismo. He criticized religious asceticism in his novels Sister Saint Sulpice (1889; Russian translation, 1913) and The Marquis of Peñalta (1883). In the novels The Idyll of an Invalid (1884) and José (1885; Russian translation, 1906), he portrayed the life of the lower classes, with its coarseness and cruelty. In such novels as Riverita (1886) and The Froth (1890; Russian translation, 1907), he presented a critical picture of the world of the bourgeoisie and the gentry. His novel The Lost Village (1903) bemoans the vanishing patriarchal rural way of life.
A. L. SHTEIN