António Lobo Antunes (; 1 September 1942 â 5 March 2026) was a Portuguese novelist and medical doctor. He was awarded the 2000 Austrian State Prize, the 2003 Ovid Prize, the 2005 Jerusalem Prize, the 2007 Camões Prize, and the 2008 Juan Rulfo Prize. Lobo Antunes was repeatedly nominated as a contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature.
António Lobo Antunes was born in Lisbon on 1 September 1942 as the eldest of six sons of João Alfredo de Figueiredo Lobo Antunes, prominent neurologist and professor, close collaborator of António Egas Moniz, Nobel Prize winner in physiology, and wife Margareida de Almeida Lima. He was the brother of João Lobo Antunes and Manuel Lobo Antunes. According to Lobo Antunes, he was of German descent through his father and of Jewish descent through his maternal grandfather. In one interview, he stated that his mother's family came from Brazil; in another, he stated that it was his father who was of Brazilian origin.
He studied at the University of Lisbon. He graduated as a medical doctor in 1969, later specializing in psychiatry.
By the end of his education, Lobo Antunes had to serve with the Portuguese Army to take part in the Portuguese Colonial War (1961âÂÂ1974). In a military hospital in Angola, he became interested in the subjects of death and "the other." Lobo Antunes came back from Africa in 1973. His experience in Africa shaped his literary career- according to the New York Times, he "charted PortugalâÂÂs halting emergence from the crippling dictatorship of Dr. António de Oliveira Salazar from 1932 to 1968, and its failed colonial wars in Africa."
He began to write at the age of 13 or 14. His first novel was rejected for more than 3 years by various publishers. In 1979, Lobo Antunes published his first novels, Memória de Elefante (Elephant's Memory) and Os Cus de Judas; in 1980, he published another novel, Conhecimento do Inferno. He practised psychiatry as well, mainly at the Hospital Miguel Bombarda of Lisbon, leaving in 1985 to dedicate himself to literature.
He published more than twenty novels, among the most important are Fado Alexandrino (1983), As Naus (1988) and O Manual dos Inquisidores (1996). His works have been translated into more than thirty languages.
Lobo Antunes was married three times. He married his first wife Maria José Xavier da Fonseca e Costa in 1970, by whom he had two daughters: Maria José Lobo Antunes and Joana Lobo Antunes. His second wife was Maria João EspÃÂrito Santo Bustorff Silva, by whom he had one daughter, Maria Isabel Bustorff Lobo Antunes. In 2010, he married Cristina Ferreira de Almeida.
In 2007, Lobo Antunes revealed that he had been operated for intestinal cancer. He suffered from progressive dementia, which forced him to give up both his long-standing smoking habit and his writing. He died on 5 March 2026, at the age of 83, with a national day of mourning declared on 7 March. His funeral was held at the Jerónimos Monastery on 7 March. Portuguese president Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa honored him with a posthumous Order of Camões.
Novels