The books of the Apocrypha include:
flyingroc says I recall correctly, the Septuagint, a translation of the old testament to Greek that dates before the advent of christianity included some of the deuterocanonicals, thus at least may show some jews accepted some of the "apocrypha" as canon.
These books came about during the Second Temple Period. They are known as Apocrypha or 'Hidden books' in Greek. Jewish tradition knows them as Sefarim Chitzonim - 'external books'. i.e they known to be external to the Jewish Canon.
They are written by Jews in Aramaic, Hebrew or Greek and were not admitted into the canonical Jewish 'Bible' because the canon was closed, or they weren't credentially divinely inspirational enough.
They contain the genre of Wisdom literature, consisting of moralistic maxims, history (in Apocrypha I and Maccabees II (the Maccabean Rebellion, written in Egypt, but it is more propagandist and emotive) both were written before 100 BCE, the former written in