Roland Gööck Explained

Roland Gööck
Birth Date:1923
Death Date:1991
Nationality:German
Occupation:Editor and non-fiction author

Roland Gööck (1923–1991) was a German editor and non-fiction author who, from 1954, was in charge of the publishers, Bertelsmann.

Life and career

Roland Gööck was born on 29 September 1923 in Felchta in Thuringia as the son of a priest. His ancestors bore the surname Jöök and came from the Baltic states.

Gööck's first book, the utopian crime thriller, Corix ist dagegen, appeared in 1948 under the pseudonym of Peter Roland.[1]

From 1954 to 1962 Gööck was Bertelsmann's chief press officer. In the late 1950s, he published new editions of the works of Jules Verne (Sigbert Mohn, Vier-Falken-) and Robinson Crusoe (Sigbert Mohn, Bertelsmann Lesering) and, in 1958, worked for Bertelsmann on a biography of Zarah Leander after the series of the same name in the Bild newspaper by Max Pierre Schaeffer. In the early 1960s, followed editions by Karl-May-Büchern for Bertelsmann, Mosaik (Hamburg), Scherz (Berne) and Phoenix (Berne/Munich), Heidi (Bertelsmann Lesering, Phoenix), late 1960s Onkel Toms Hütte (Bertelsmann, Scherz) and Wilhelm Busch’s Hausapotheke (Praesentverlag Peter).

1962 saw the start of Gööck's non-fiction career. He proposed to Bertelsmann, to produce a large cookery book for Bertelsmann Lesering;[2] in the first quarter of 1963 the book broke all edition records. After that, Gööck wrote more than 230 non-fiction books and illustrated books during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s (games manuals and cookery books) under his own name but also under various pseudonyms, that were chosen for specific subject areas:

Roland M. Gööck (football etc.), Lutz Adron (general knowledge), Pim Pinelli (Gewürze der Welt), Peter Roland, Alexander Ettl (recipe books for fish, cheese and spices), Alex Ettl (architecture, cookery books), Roland Gek (only for books in Serbia), Roland Gēks (Große Erfindungen …), Rolf Jeromin (worldly themes: wine guide, culinary cuisine worldwide, travel reports), Peter Korn (Karl-May-Büchern), Franz Mausener (humour) und Peggy Persson (Wilhelm Busch’s Hausapotheke).

At Bertelsmann, Gööck was called Sachbuch-Goethe ("Non-fiction Goethe"), others described him as a Vielschreiber ("writing maniac") and Sachbuch-Alleskönner ("Non-fiction Knowall")[3] or as a Tausendsassa ("Jack of all trades") and Auflagenmillionär ("printing millionaire").[4] In 1983, his 230 books had a combined total print run of 41.5 million, including the German non-fiction leader, Das neue große Kochbuch (3 million), Alle Wunder dieser Welt (2 million) and Der Mensch in seiner Welt (12 volumes, 12 million).

In addition to the versatility of the topics he worked on, speed of publication was also Gööck's specialty. For the first time at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Gööck and his team made sure that the first illustrated books reached the bookstores just four days after the closing ceremony. Further 'Gööck rush jobs' (Gööck’sche Schnellschüsse) (industry jargon) came out including picture books within only three days after the football and athletics world championships and the Olympic Games.

Gööck died on 2 October 1991 in Regensburg.

Publications

For most publications (as of 1983: 230 books, non-fiction and illustrated books) it is impossible to work out to what extent Gööck was the author, initiator, coordinator and/or editor. According to WorldCat[5] there are currently (2011) 613 works in 951 publications and 21 languages, including German, English, Finnish, French, Italian, Croatian, Latvian, Dutch, Norwegian, Polish; Portuguese, Swedish, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish and Hungarian.

Early titles

Non-fiction books (selection)

Literature

References

  1. Jörg Weigand: Träume auf dickem Papier: das Leihbuch nach 1945, ein Stück Buchgeschichte; Nomos, 1995; Seite 56
  2. Thomas Lehning: Das Medienhaus: Geschichte und Gegenwart des Bertelsmann-Konzerns; Wilhelm Fink, Munich, 2004; Seite 78
  3. W. Christian Schmitt: Vor dem Ende der Lesekultur: 20 Jahre Buch- und Literaturmarkt aus nächster Nähe; Morstadt, 1990; Seite 268
  4. http://www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/kommentar-goeoeck-lebt-1189487.html Gööck lebt
  5. http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50-35384 WorldCat: Roland Gööck