Gilbert Cesbron (13 January 1913, Paris – 12 August 1979, Paris) was a French
novelist.
Biography
Gilbert Cesbron (13 January 1913, Paris – 12 August 1979, Paris) was a French
novelist. Born in Paris, Cesbron attended what is now known as
Lycée Condorcet. In 1944 he published his first novel, Les innocents de Paris ("The Innocent of Paris"), in Switzerland. He first achieved wide public acclaim with the publication of Notre prison est un royaume ("Our Prison is a Kingdom") in 1948 and Il est minuit, docteur Schweitzer ("It is midnight, Doctor Schweitzer") in 1950.
In his works Cesbron tended to illustrate and describe relevant social topics such as
juvenile delinquency in Chiens perdus sans collier ("Lost Dogs Without Collars"), violence in Entre chiens et loups ("Between Dogs and Wolves"),
euthanasia in Il est plus tard que tu ne penses ("It is Later than You Think") and
working priests in Les Saints vont en enfer ("Saints in Hell").
In 1955, Cesbron's book Chiens perdus sans collier, the story of an orphan boy and a benevolent judge, was made
into a movie starring
Jean Gabin and
Robert Dalban.