Hartleben, Otto Erich (Clausthal, 1864-1905, Salò, Lake Garda), was a law student at Berlin and Leipzig universities. He entered the civil service in 1889, but resigned in the following year in order to devote himself to writing. The immense success of his first tragedy Rosenmontag enabled him to spend much time in Italy by Lake Garda. In his last years tensions developed in his married life and at the time of his early death he was contemplating divorce. In his writing Hartleben was anti-bourgeois, but he had no socialist leanings; his attitude was more akin to the irony and mockery of O. J. Bierbaum and his anti-philistinism made him many enemies.
Hartleben's earliest works were deft and amusing erotic comedies. Angele (1891) exposes what he sees as the fickleness of women and their fundamental selfishness in the pursuit of love. In Die Erziehung zur Ehe (1893) a wealthy mother makes a mistake in choosing an uncle from the country to introduce her son to life in town. The uncle interprets the task in his own way in a series of hilarious episodes. Hanna Jagert (1893) has as its central figure a working-class girl of Social Democrat opinions, who takes a feminist standpoint, and then succeeds by means of a pregnancy in becoming a baroness. The comedy Die sittliche Förderung followed in 1897. Three years later Hartleben took all the theatres of Germany by storm with the tragedy Rosenmontag (1900), the success of which is attributable to its military setting and sensational action.
Hartleben is the author of a number of light, fluent stories, including Die Geschichte vom abgerissenen Kopf (1893) and other collections, among them Vom gastfreien Pastor (1895), Der römische Maler (1898), and Liebe kleine Mama (1904), which is also the title of the second story in the volume, a Novelle in short letters. Hartleben also wrote mellifluous and often charming verse, contained in the volumes Meine Verse (1895) and Von reifen Früchten (1902). He collected his poetry in 1902, repeating the title Meine Verse. His Tagebuch was published posthumously in 1906, Aphorismen in 1920, and letters (Briefe an eine Freundin) in 1910. Ausgewählte Werke appeared in 1909 (3 vols.).




