Purportedly the earliest Mexican, Latin-American novel written in 1816 as a serial. This is a rather lengthy novel of the rogue Periquillo written as first person narrative. It as mixture of Pickwick Papers (Dickens), The Life of Gargantua & Pantagruel (Rabelais), Bouvard & Pecuchet (Flaubert) and anything by Galdos.
We see him develop from a unashamed teenager to a friar, doctor, barber, soldier, sexton, apothecary, aid. Along the way he gets married, gambles fortunes away, wins the lottery, imprisoned, lies, cheats at cards, shipwrecked, travels to China, reaches rock bottom and so on. Starting off sympathetically and humorously, this anti-hero really does do some obnoxious, criminal things; what ultimately works however is the honest frankness and colourful people he meets along the way. The overall tale always has you hooked.
The reason I loved this story was it really was entertaining and engaging whilst being educational on all those professions and how to use them to personal, selfish gain. The setting in Mexico City and the 1800's landscape was also wonderful. There are some rather useful footnotes by the translator and Lizardi.
The unabridged version (a shorter version is available I think) took me nearly a month to complete in one go but as it is quite episodic I guess you could read it in installments (much in the mode it was originally released).
Well worth a try - an historic gem.