Hans Fallada (born July 21, 1893, Greifswald, Germany—died February 5, 1947, Berlin) was a German novelist who was one of the most prominent exponents of the realistic style known as Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity). His depiction of social misfits, which was influenced by his personal experience, resonated with readers at the turn of the 21st century as much as it did with Fallada’s contemporaries.
Fallada’s parents, Wilhelm (who was a judge) and Elisabeth, moved to Greifswald several months before his birth; the family, in which he was the third of four children, subsequently lived in Berlin and Leipzig. In 1911 he took part in a duel that was supposed to be a double suicide, but, while the other duelist, a friend of Fallada’s, died, he survived and was sent to a mental institution. As a result, he did not graduate from secondary school, and after his release in 1913 he began an apprenticeship in agriculture. He volunteered to join the German army in 1914 but, because of his alcohol and morphine dependency, was found unfit to serve. He spent most of 1917–19 trying to recover, without success. Later he worked as an administrator on different estates. He spent three months in jail in 1923 for embezzlement, and he was imprisoned again from 1925 to 1928 on similar charges.
On April 5, 1929, Fallada married Anna (“Suse”) Issel. They had three children. He worked as a journalist before finding employment with the publisher Rowohlt in Berlin in 1930. Rowohlt had already published two of his novels under the name Hans Fallada—Der junge Goedeschal (1920; “The Young Goedeschal”) and Anton und Gerda (1923)—but both went unnoticed. His first literary success came in 1931 with Bauern, Bonzen, und Bomben (“Farmers, Bigwigs, and Bombs”; Eng. trans. A Small Circus), and he gained international fame for Kleiner Mann—was nun? (Little Man, What Now?), published in German in 1932 and first translated into English the following year. The novel describes a young family’s struggles with unemployment and poverty in the wake of the Great Depression. The proceeds allowed Fallada to buy an estate in Carwitz.
In 1933 Fallada was arrested by the SA and held in custody for 11 days because he had come under suspicion of discussing subversive ideas. While the Nazis were in power, Fallada published mainly innocuous works without making any political statements, which, combined with his decision not to emigrate, led after the war to him being criticized as an opportunist. Notable exceptions are Wer einmal aus dem Blechnapf frisst (1934; “Who Once Eats from the Tin Cup”; Eng. trans. The World Outside and Once a Jailbird), a novel about a man convicted of embezzlement who is discharged from prison and struggles to reintegrate into society, for which Fallada drew upon his personal experience; Wolf unter Wölfen (1937; Wolf Among Wolves); and Der eiserne Gustav (1938; Iron Gustav). All three have at their centres a theme that Fallada explored in all of his serious, critically acclaimed works: the relationship between individual and society in difficult situations and during the trying times in Germany from World War I to the Great Depression. Those novels show most clearly Fallada’s use of the Neue Sachlichkeit style.
In 1943 Fallada served in the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Reich Labour Service) in France. The following year his wife divorced him, and, after he made an attempt on her life, Fallada was sent to an asylum, where he wrote Der Trinker (The Drinker), the story of a self-destructive alcoholic; it was published posthumously in 1950. On February 1, 1945, he married his second wife, Ursula Losch, and for a short time he was the mayor of Feldberg.
Fallada based his last novel, Jeder stirbt für sich allein (1947; Every Man Dies Alone, or Alone in Berlin), on the true story of a working-class couple who were executed for their resistance to Nazism. When the novel was released in English for the first time in 2009, it became an international best seller and rekindled interest in Fallada’s work.
Several of Fallada’s novels have been made into movies and miniseries, and in 1981 the city of Neumünster began awarding a literary prize named for him.