Max Kretzer (born June 7, 1854, Posen, East Prussia—died July 15, 1941, Berlin) was a German Expressionist writer who excelled in describing working conditions of the Berlin industrial proletariat in the 1880s and 1890s.
The son of a prosperous innkeeper whose business failed, Kretzer went to work in a factory at the age of 13, educated himself, and began to write when he was 25. Some of his minutely detailed sociological novels are based upon his working experience: Der Fassadenraphael (1911; “The Raphael of the Façades”) describes his experience as a sign writer and Der alte Andreas (1911; “Old Andrew”) records his work in a lamp factory. In other novels he treats pressing social problems of the day: prostitution in Die Betrogenen (1882; “The Deceived”); the fate of the urban workers in Die Verkommenen (1883; “The Depraved”); and the destruction of the small independent artisan by rapid industrialization in Meister Timpe (1888; “Master Timpe”), considered his best novel.
Kretzer was influenced by Émile Zola in his application of the Naturalistic view of literature and life to the Berlin environment with which he was familiar, and he was also an admirer of Charles Dickens.