Silas Hocking
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Silas Kitto Hocking (March 24, 1850–September 15, 1935) was an English novelist and Methodist preacher. He was born at St Stephen-in-Brannel, Cornwall, to James Hocking, part owner of a tin mine, and his wife Elizabeth. In 1870 he was ordained as a minister. Working in different parts of England over the next few years, he wrote his first novel, Alec Green, while living in Liverpool in 1878. It was, however, with his second novel that he won great fame; Her Benny, a story of the street children of Liverpool. This sold over a million copies. All in all he wrote fifty books.
Kitto was also politically active, for the Liberal party. He died in Highgate, Middlesex, and was survived by his wife, Esther Mary, to whom he had been married since 1876. Together they had one son and two daughters. Through his mother he was related to the biblical scholar John Kitto, and his brother was Joseph Hocking (1860–1937), also a novelist and Methodist minister.
[edit] Selected works
- Alec Green (1878)
- Her Benny (1879)
- Ivy (1881)
- Real Grit (1887)
- For Light and Liberty (1890)
- Where Duty Lies (1891)
- A Son of Reuben (1894)
- For such is Life (1896)
- In Spite of Fate (1897)
- Gripped (1902)
- A Modern Pharisee (1907)
- My Book of Memory (memoirs, 1923)
[edit] External link
[edit] Source
- R. G. Burnett, "Hocking, Silas Kitto (1850–1935)", rev. Sayoni Basu, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.