Agustin Fabian


Agustin Caralde Fabian was a well-known Filipino writer.

Early life

Fabian was born Agustín Fabián y Caralde on August 15, 1901 in Quingua, Bulacan, to Epifanio Fabián y Sayo and Macaria Caralde y Roxas. He graduated with a BS in Industrial Management from the University of Illinois. During World War II Fabian served as a colonel of guerrillas in the Bulacan area, where he fought against the Japanese.

Career

Fabian worked as chemistry Editor of Graphic, where he is credited with giving the newspaper a "leisurely but sophisticated tone," and for Liwayway. He wrote fiction and essays in both English and Tagalog and was also regarded as a noted pre-war Filipino journalist.
Among his published works were: Sino Ako?, Basta Mayaman, Hindi Man Hanapin, Magbayad Ka!, and Ana Malaya.
His most famous novel is Timawa, which was praised for "radical break from the usual complicated plots and labyrinthine structures of many novels" published in the Philippines at the time. The novel, written in Tagalog, follows the life of a Filipino student named Andres who takes a number of jobs in the United States, including as a dishwasher. Timawa was first published in 1953 and was republished in 2000 and 2003 by Ateneo de Manila University Press.
Other novels include Maria Mercedes, which was published in 1953.
Fabian is known for encouraging other Filipino authors to write in Tagalog and is recognized as one of the early authors to write in that language. He was also featured in They - Noon: Oral History of 9 Filipino Writers, released in 2001.

Personal life

Fabian first married Ángela Fernández on February 24, 1929 in Quingua, Bulacan, and they had six children: Maria Teresita, Leon, Beatriz, Augusto, Manuel, and Sergio. After Fernández died, Fabian later married Rosario Ladia Jose, and they had two more children: Emma, and Noel.
Fabian died on April 24, 1976.