Greif, Jean-Jacques 1944-

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Greif, Jean-Jacques 1944-

PERSONAL:

Born September 23, 1944, in Paris, France; son of Lonek Greif (doctor) and Malvina Zien; married; wife's name Katia; children: two sons, one daughter. Education: Attended the Ecole Polytechnique, 1964-66.

ADDRESSES:

Home—Paris, France. E-mail—[email protected].

CAREER:

Worked variously as an artist, advertising executive, copywriter, and freelance writer. Marie Claire, Paris, France, journalist, 1975—; founder and teacher at a small, experimental high school, Paris, France, 1982-87.

WRITINGS:

YOUNG ADULT NOVELS

Une nouvelle vie, Malvina (title means "A New Life, Malvina"; children's book), Ecole des loisirs (Paris, France), 2000.

Lonek le hussard, Ecole des loisirs (Paris, France), 2000.

Sans accent, Ecole des loisirs (Paris, France), 2001.

Nine Eleven, Ecole des loisirs (Paris, France), 2002.

(Also translator) The Fighter (published in France as Ring de la Mort), Bloomsbury (New York, NY), 2006.

OTHER

Les ordinateurs et les robots, (title means "Computers and Robots"; nonfiction children's book), Hachette jeunesse (Paris, France), 1987.

Moi, Marilyn (title means "I, Marilyn"; biographical novel), Ecole des loisirs (Paris, France), 1998.

Jeanne d'Arc (title means "Joan of Arc"; children's book), Ecole des loisirs (Paris, France), 1999.

Einstein: l'homme qui chevauchait la lumière, (biography), Archipel (Paris, France), 2005.

Also author of biographical novels about Beethoven and Mozart, and numerous computer manuals.

SIDELIGHTS:

French writer and journalist Jean-Jacques Greif began his career in 1969 as an advertising account executive and moved on to work as a copywriter when he realized he could actually earn money by writing. In 1975, he took a position as a staff writer for Marie Claire magazine in Paris, and he continued there while writing computer books, children's books, and young adult novels. Several of his books are inspired by his parents, Lonek and Malvina, who escaped from Poland prior to World War II to avoid persecution as Jews. Both worked as part of the French Resistance and were arrested by the Nazis. Lonek spent one year in Auschwitz, and his friend's experiences there inspired The Fighter, the first of Greif's young adult novels to be published in English. It tells the story of Moshe, a fourteen-year-old Polish boy who emigrates from Warsaw to Paris in 1929. Moshe finds his new life as an amateur boxer thrown into upheaval when the Nazis invade the city and he is sent to Auschwitz. Hazel Rochman, writing for Booklist, commented that the book "may be too much for some readers." However, Rita Soltan, in a review for School Library Journal, found Greif's effort to be "tough, realistic reading with some raw language."

BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:

PERIODICALS

Booklist, October 1, 2006, Hazel Rochman, review of The Fighter, p. 48.

Horn Book, November-December, 2006, Martha V. Parravano, review of The Fighter, p. 712.

Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 2006, review of The Fighter, p. 841.

School Library Journal, December, 2006, Rita Soltan, review of The Fighter, p. 140.

ONLINE

Jean-Jacques Greif Home Page,http://www.jjgreif.com (April 14, 2007).

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