Else Dehio was the daughter of a
Baltic German doctor,
Karl Dehio. She initially qualified as a nurse, but then fled from her Baltic homeland to
Berlin ahead of the
Russian Revolution in 1918. During the rest of her life she lived in Berlin,
Lüdenscheid and, from 1955, in
Murnau in
Upper Bavaria. From 1934 she wrote numerous stories, books for young people and novels, often with topics from her Baltic homeland. Her children's book Indian Summer (Indianersommer) was on the shortlist for
German Youth Book Prize in 1966. In 1920 she married the manufacturer and later CDU politician,
Richard Hueck (1893-1968), who was Mayor of Lüdenscheid in 1946.
Hueck-Dehio died on 30 June 1976 in Murnau.
Works
Die Frau und die geistige Schöpferkraft. Essays. 1933.
Die Hochzeit auf Sandnes. Roman. Verlag Neue Nation, Berlin 1934, new editions published by
Eher-Verlag to 1944.
Die Schwelle. Novelle. 1938.
Der Kampf um Torge. Roman. Eher, Munich 1938. new editions to 1943.
Silke Pasewalck: Raumdarstellung und Raumsemantik in Else Hueck-Dehio's novel "Liebe Renata". In: Triangulum. Germanistisches Jahrbuch für Estland, Lettland und Litauen, Band 19 (2013), S. 137–152.