Panero spent his childhood in Astorga. He did secondary schooling in San Sebastián and León, studied law in the University of Valladolid, and completed his legal studies in Madrid. His first verses of poetry became known in a journal called Nueva Revista in Madrid, which he founded and where he published his works Crónica cuando amanece and Poema de la niebla. In the fall of 1929 he fell ill of tuberculosis and spent eight months recovering in Guadarrama. There he fell in love with a fellow patient, Joaquina Márquez, who died in the following months, who he referred to in one of his poems. He continued his studies in Cambridge University and in Tours and Poitiers, and he grew to love English and French literature. He also published some of his works in Caballo Verde para la poesía, a journal directed by Pablo Neruda. During the Civil War, Panero was arrested, taken to San Marcos de León, and accused of collecting funds for the International Red Aid; but through the mediation of his mother, along with Miguel de Unamuno and Carmen Polo, the wife of Francisco Franco- Panero's mother's cousin-, he was able to avoid legal penalties and returned to Astorga in November. In 1937, his brother Juan, who was also a poet, died in a car accident. Following this incident, which had a profound impact on Panero, he began to shift more toward conservatism. Panero wrote Adolescente en Sombra about the incident and in memory of his brother. In 1941, Panero married Felicidad Blanc, who was also a writer. They had three children together: Juan Luis and Leopoldo María, who also became poets, and José Moisés "Michi". During the war, Panero joined the Falange Española de las JONS, and was later named cultural attaché to the Spanish embassy, and director of the Spanish Institute in London. There he met and associated with some of the greatly regarded outcasts from the war, such as Luis Cernuda and Esteban Salazar Chapela.
Selected bibliography
La estancia vacía 1944
Escrito a cada instante
Canto personal 1953. In answer to Pablo Neruda's "Canto General"