Background
Rotor was born in the Philippines and attended the University of the Philippines.
Rotor was born in the Philippines and attended the University of the Philippines.
He graduated simultaneously from the Conservatory of Music and the College of Medicine.
He trained further at Johns Hopkins University"s medical school, publishing a paper on a rare form of hyperbilirubinaemia (jaundice) now known as "Rotor syndrome". During World World War II, Rotor served as executive secretary of the Philippine Commonwealth government-in-exile under Manuel L. Quezon, the Philippine president in exile. In the immediate post-World World War II period, he was appointed secretary of the Department of Health and Welfare.
Later, Rotor was director of the University of the Philippines" Postgraduate School of Medicine and was a practising physician until the early 1980s.
Rotor was an internationally respected writer of fiction and non-fiction in English. He is widely considered among the best Filipino short story writers of the twentieth century.
Rotor"s best-known literary works are The Wound and the Scar (1937), Confidentially, Doctor (1965), Selected Stories from the Wound and the Scar (1973), The Men Who Play God (1983), and the short stories "Dahong Palay" (1928) and "Zita" (1930). The orchid genus Rotorara is named after Gavino.
They had no children.
He was a charter member of the Philippine Book Guild. The guild"s initial publication (1937) was Rotor"s The Wound and the Scar, despite Rotor"s protests that someone else"s work should have been selected. He was an orchid fancier and breeder, a long-time member of the Philippine Orchid Society, and is the namesake of a Vanda orchid species (Vanda merillii var rotorii).