Marc Levy

Marc Levy (born 16 October 1961) is a French novelist.

Marc Levy
Marc Levy at the Salon du Livre 2011 in Geneva
Born (1961-10-16) 16 October 1961
Boulogne-Billancourt, France
OccupationNovelist
GenreNovel
Notable worksIf Only It Were True, Vous revoir
Website
www.marclevy.info

Career

Levy was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, Hauts-de-Seine, and studied management and computers at Paris Dauphine University.

In the late 1990s, Levy wrote a story that his sister, then a screenwriter, encouraged him to send to Editions Robert Laffont, who immediately decided to publish If Only It Were True. Before it was published, Steven Spielberg (DreamWorks) acquired film rights to the novel. The movie, Just like Heaven, produced by Steven Spielberg, and starring Reese Witherspoon and Mark Ruffalo, was a #1 box office hit in America in 2005.

After If Only It Were True, Marc Levy began writing full-time.

Levy was first married at the age of 26; he had a son, the inspiration for If Only It Were True. He is married and lives in New York City.[1]

Bibliography

  • If Only It Were True, 2000 (adapted for film in 2005)
  • Finding You, 2001 (adapted for television in 2007)
  • Seven Days for an Eternity, 2003
  • In Another Life, 2004
  • Vous revoir, 2005 (the sequel to If Only It Were True)
  • London Mon Amour, 2006 (adapted for film in 2008)
  • Children of Freedom, 2007
  • All Those Things We Never Said, 2008.
  • The First Day, 2009
  • The First Night, 2009 (the sequel to The First Day)
  • The Shadow Thief, 2010
  • The Strange Journey of Mr. Daldry, 2011
  • Replay, 2012
  • Stronger than Fear, 2013
  • Another Idea of Happiness, 2014
  • P.S. from Paris, 2015
  • Hope, 2016
  • The Last of the Sanfields, 2019

Filmography

  • La tortue sur le dos (1978) - Gus, le voyageur
  • L'amour dure trois ans (2011) - Himself

Short film

  • La Lettre de Nabila directed for Amnesty International, adapted from a short story he co-wrote with Sophie Fontanel.

References

  1. Lennox Morrison (6 May 2011). "French Author Marc Levy on Failing, Starting Anew". The Wall Street Journal.
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