In the 1950s Bober met
François Truffaut and became his assistant on the films
400 Blows (1959),
Shoot the Piano Player (1960), and
Jules and Jim (1962). In 1967 he directed his first documentary for TV. During the 1960s and 1970s his documentaries primarily explored the consequences of the Holocaust. In 1979 he collaborated with
Georges Perec on a
documentary film called
Ellis Island Revisited, an adaptation of which, credited to Perec and Bober, was published in book form as
Recits d'Ellis Island: histoires d'errance et d'espoir. It was published in English by The New Press as
Ellis Island (1995), translated by
Harry Mathews and Jane Blatt. The French publisher P.O.L. has published four novels by Bober:
Quoi de neuf sur la guerre (1993),
Berg et Beck (1999),
Laissées-pour-compte (2005) and
On ne peut plus dormir tranquille quand on a une fois ouvert les yeux.(2010).
On ne peut plus dormir tranquille quand on a une fois ouvert les yeux has been translated into English and published by
The New Press under the title
Wide Awake. As of 2025, it is Bober's only novel to have been translated into English. ==References==