Boris Schreiber was born on 28 May 1923 in Berlin, where his parents, Wladimir Schreiber and Eugénie Markowitch, lived as refugees of the
Russian Revolution. His father worked for the German-Russian joint stock transport company (Derutra) and later for a German import-export company. The family enjoyed a life of prosperity. After his father lost his job six years later, the Schreibers left Berlin, moving to Antwerp, where they lived in abject poverty. Eugénie's family in
Riga subsequently took them in. In 1930, they moved to Paris, where Boris Schreiber was sent to several schools, having already been taught French by his aunt in Riga. In 1937, he began to write a diary and tried to establish contact with various writers (
Romain Rolland,
Georges Duhamel,
Francis Carco)). He also kept abreast of the literary world and thus discovered the works of other Jewish immigrant writers from the East, in particular those of
Irène Némirovsky and
Jean Malaquais. In 1938 he visited
André Gide and read excerpts from his diary and a short story to him. During the
German occupation, his family settled in
Marseille. At this time, Boris Schreiber visited Gide in
Cabris, where he also met
Roger Martin du Gard,
Henri Thomas and
Jean Schlumberger. After having completed his secondary school education, he enrolled at the Faculty of Law at
Aix-Marseille University (1942–1943). Although he was registered with the
Vichy administration as a
stateless Russian, he escaped persecution under anti-Jewish laws because his religion was specified as "
orthodox". To avoid compulsory work service (
STO), he worked for the German
Todt Organisation (OT) in 1944. Prior to the liberation of Marseilles, he joined the
FFI resistance network and worked for the newspaper
Rouge Midi. He subsequently joined his parents in Paris and met Simone there soon after; they married several years later. In 1947, he received French citizenship and enrolled at the
Sorbonne University to study literary studies and Russian. At this time, he started to write his first novel, ''Le Droit d'asile
– a narrative about the war in Marseilles – published in 1957. Boris Schreiber taught for several years. Thanks to financial support from his parents, however, he was later able to dedicate himself entirely to writing. His father had set up a successful oil business. Schreiber was awarded the Prix Combat for La Rencontre des absents
(1963). He published a dozen novels with several publishers, which received recognition but failed to reach a broad public. His novel La Traversée du dimanche'' (1987) was awarded the
Prix Sainte-Beuve. In 1968, he left Simone to live with Lucienne. His novel
Le Cratère published in 1975 is about this separation. Some years after the death of his father (1976), he left Lucienne and divorced Simone in order to marry Arria (1982). He travelled abroad and lived in
Long Island (NY) in the United States for a period of time. After the death of his mother (1985), he began to write autobiographical works and was awarded the
Prix Renaudot for ''Un silence d'environ une demi-heure
in 1996. His last work, Faux titre'', a collection of short stories, was published some weeks before his death. == The man and his work ==