Hans Fallada was born in Germany in 1893. His life was checkered by a failed adolescent suicide pact in which his friend died, addiction to morphine and alcohol, periods of incarceration in prison and mental hospitals, and brushes with the Nazi regime. His most famous novels include Little Man, What Now?, The Drinker and Alone in Berlin, written in 24 days. Fallada died weeks before its publication, in February 1947 in Berlin.
We use cookies on this site to enable certain parts of the site to function and to collect information about your use of the site so that we can improve visitors' experience and show more relevant content and advertising. Please select all if you are happy for us to proceed, or you can change your cookie settings. For more information, please see our cookie policy.
We use cookies on this site to enable certain parts of the site to function and to collect information about your use of the site so that we can improve our visitors’ experience.
For more on our cookies and changing your settings click here.