Gustav Höcker


Gustav Höcker was a German author and translator of popular historical novels.

Biography

Gustav Höcker was born on 28 September 1832 in a suburb of Eilenburg. His father was a colorist in the textile industry, and his younger brother was Oskar Höcker, who also became a writer. He spent his childhood in Eilenburg, an early industrial center, and received his secondary education in Chemnitz. Until the age of 26 he was, against his will, a merchant, an occupation he left to become a professional writer.
Höcker made a name for himself as a writer of narratives, many of which recount the events of the nineteenth century. He published studies and biographies of drama authors and politicians, and of musicians such as Ludwig van Beethoven, Joseph Haydn, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. A book with "simply written life-stories" on Haydn, Joseph Haydn: a study of his life and time for youth, was translated into English and published in Chicago in 1907. He also wrote crime novels and assisted his brother Oskar, himself a prolific writer. He was influenced by Charles Dickens, besides Karl Gutzkow and Ferdinand Stolle. He spent much of his life in Karlsruhe, and died in Breslau on 11 October 1911.
He attained a measure of commercial success with adaptations of novels in English, including novels by James Fenimore Cooper, Robert Montgomery Bird, and Daniel Defoe. His version of Charles Sealsfield's Tokeah, or the White Rose was only one of many German versions of the late 1890s.

Books authored (selection)