07/01/2013 HuffPost Books - Thomas Heise
From Dionysius the Renegade to Jeremy "Terminator" LeRoy, the successful hoaxer must concoct the right combination of elements to make the work believable.
When it comes to a false attribution, mastering another's style is essential. But instead of stealing someone else's letters and peddling them as their own, hoaxers hawk their own words as another's or, in a modern variant, fabricate a past for themselves--and the more outlandish, the better.
Whatever the motive--fame, money, envy, or malice--the act is at heart a desire to recreate the world. For the literary prankster, this world and this life are never enough. While preying upon human gullibility, s/he also caters to our need to have faith in a world different from the one we know. The hoaxer liberates us a little and permits us to imagine that with the right story we too might be someone else entirely.
Here are five famous literary hoaxes.