Boudard was born on 17 December 1925 in the
13th arrondissement of Paris to a 17-year-old mother. He was brought up first by an adoptive family in the
Loiret region of the centre of France, then by his grandmother in the south of Paris. Boudard had a late career. As a teenager, he was living in a country occupied by the German Army. He was wounded fighting for the French and he was awarded a military medal. His early adult life was spent in casual work, periods in jail and in a sanatorium recovering from
tuberculosis. He experimented with writing, but it was not until he was 33 that he decided to be a full-time writer. He credited the writer
Albert Paraz with inspiring this move. His novels are characterised by the colloquial terms and slang that Boudard used to describe life in the 1940s. His works are autobiographical and he used his periods in a sanatorium and in jail as a basis for his stories. His 1963 novel
The Cherry and his 1972 story
The Hospital are examples, as is his 1992 novel
The Amazing Mr Joseph which tells the story of a French spy who becomes a millionaire dealing on the
black market during World War II (based on the real career of
Joseph Joanovici). Many of Boudard novels were adapted for French films and television. Boudard had a wife and two sons. He died in
Nice on 14 January 2000. ==References==