Born in
Paterson, New Jersey, in September 1934. Kluger grew up living with his mother, Ida, and older brother, Alan, on the
Upper West Side of New York after his parents were divorced when he was seven. Though neither of his parents completed high school, they made sure their two sons had the advantage of a good education. Kluger enrolled in the
Columbia School of Journalism but did not graduate. He attended the
Horace Mann School in the Riverdale section of the
Bronx and
Princeton University, attaining honors as an English major, but his principal pursuit at college was the school newspaper where he was the 1955–56 chair of the
Daily Princetonian. Kluger has been greatly assisted in his nonfiction work by the research skills of his wife, the former
Phyllis Schlain, whom he married in
South Orange, New Jersey, in March 1957. She attended
Douglass College and later graduated from Columbia University, where she majored in art history. Her academic background and a remarkable gift for the fiber arts stood her in good stead when she authored two books of her own,
A Needlepoint Gallery of Patterns from the Past (Knopf) and
Victorian Designs for Needlepoint (Holt, Rinehart & Winston). Phyllis is also the creator of satiric and documentary quilts with titles like "Cereal Killer Strikes Again" and "The Real George Washington, Warts and All" and dealing with, among other subjects, the rise and fall of the British empire, American homes, and the fall of Soviet communism. Her six-foot-square quilt "The Princeton-Yale Game Increases in Intensity" is on permanent display at Princeton University's Frist Student Center. The Klugers have two sons,
Matthew Kluger, a disbarred attorney, and Ted, a builder-contractor, and six grandsons. ==Writing career==