Wilhelm Hauff was a German poet and novelist best known for his fairy tales.
Educated at the University of Tübingen, Hauff worked as a tutor and in 1827 became editor of J.F. Cotta’s newspaper Morgenblatt. Hauff had a narrative and inventive gift and sense of form; he wrote with ease, combining narrative themes of others with his own. His work shows a pleasant, often spirited, wit. There is a strong influence of E.T.A. Hoffmann in his fantasy Mitteilungen aus den Memoiren des Satans (1826–27; “Pronouncements from the Memoirs of Satan”). Hauff’s Lichtenstein (1826), a historical novel of 16th-century Württemberg, was one of the first imitations of Sir Walter Scott. He is also known for a number of fairy tales that were published in his Märchenalmanach auf das Jahr 1826 and had lasting popularity. Similar volumes followed in 1827 and 1828. His novellas, which were collected posthumously in Novellen, 3 vol. (1828), include Jud Süss (The Jew Suss; serialized 1827).
Relatos del mar
Alexandre Olivier Exquemelin & Charles Dickens & Edgar Allan Poe & Emilio Salgari & Franz Kafka & Jack London & Joseph Conrad & Roald Dahl & Ernest Hemingway & Máximo Gorki & Saki & Pío Baroja & Benito Pérez Galdós & Henry James & Herman Melville & Guy de Maupassant & Rudyard Kipling & James Fenimore Cooper & William Hope Hodgson & Washington Irving & Bram Stoker & Daniel Defoe & Nathaniel Hawthorne & Emilia Pardo Bazán & Robert Louis Stevenson & Stephen Crane & Antón Chéjov & Rainer Maria Rilke & Winston Churchill & Marcel Schwob & Anthony Trollope & Fernando Colón & Richard Middleton & Lev Nikoláievich Tolstói & Wilhelm Hauff & Ivan Sergueevich Turguenev & Richard Henry Dana & Francis Scott Fitzgerald & Jules Verne & Daniel Tyerman & Fritdjof Nansen & George Bennet & Hugh Crow & Joshua Slocum & Liam O’Flaherty & Olaudah Equiano