Eduardo Mallea (born Aug. 14, 1903, Bahía Blanca, Arg.—died Nov. 12, 1982, Buenos Aires) was an Argentine novelist, essayist, and short-story writer whose psychological novels won critical acclaim.
Mallea began as a short-story writer, first achieving recognition with Cuentos para una inglesa desesperada (1926; “Stories for a Desperate Englishwoman”). In 1931 he became editor of the weekly literary magazine of the Buenos Aires newspaper La nación. Soon, however, he found that the novel provided a suitable structure for his style of writing, enabling both psychological analysis of character and philosophical digression. Often set in Argentina, Mallea’s novels were also concerned with national and regional problems, as in La bahía de silencio (1940; The Bay of Silence) and Las águilas (1943; “The Eagles”). In Todo verdor perecerá (1941; All Green Shall Perish), which many consider his greatest work, he explored—by the use of interior monologue and flashback techniques—the anguish of a woman living in the provinces.
Mallea served in such posts as Argentine representative to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (1955–58). He also wrote several volumes of travel books and essays. His final works were published in the early 1970s.