Vicente Blasco Ibánez

Vicente
Blasco Ibáñez, (b. Jan. 29, 1867,
Valencia, Spain—d. Jan. 28, 1928, Menton,
Fr.), Spanish writer and politician, who
achieved world renown for his novels
dealing with World War I, the most
famous of which, Los cuatro jinetes del
Apocalipsis (1916; The Four Horsemen of
the Apocalypse, 1918), was used as the
basis for two U.S. films. He was
associated with the Generation of ’98.
At the
age of 18, while studying law at Madrid
and contributing articles to political
journals, Blasco Ibáñez wrote an
antimonarchist poem for which he was
sent to prison—the first of many such
punishments for his political beliefs.
He founded the republican journal El
Pueblo in 1891 and was first elected to
the Cortes (parliament) in 1901, to
which he was returned seven times before
he voluntarily exiled himself in 1923
and settled on the French Riviera. He
did so because of his opposition to the
military dictatorship of Miguel Primo de
Rivera.
Blasco
Ibáñez’ early work, composed mainly of
regional novels such as Flor de mayo
(1895; Mayflower, 1921), La barraca
(1898; The Cabin, 1917), and Cañas y
barro (1902; Reeds and Mud, 1966), is
marked by a vigorous and intense realism
and considerable dramatic force in the
depiction of the life of Valencia. Later
novels, such as La bodega (1906; The
Fruit of the Vine, 1919), are held to
have suffered from a heavy ideological
treatment of serious social problems.
More popular novels, Sangre y arena
(1909; Blood and Sand, 1922); La maja
desnuda (1906; Woman Triumphant); his
best known, Los cuatro jinetes del
Apocalipsis; and others, brought him
fame but cost him critical approval
because of their sensational nature. He
became a member of the French Legion of
Honour in 1906.