Biography
Marcel Gabriel Rouff was born in Geneva, Switzerland on May 4, 1877. His father, Jules Rouff, was a well-known publisher; his mother was Camille Veil. The family moved to Paris when Marcel was just an enfant. He attended the Lycée Carnot, on Boulevard Malesherbes in Paris and the Sorbonne, where he earned a Docteur-ès-lettres (effectively a PhD). In 1911, he married a French woman, Juliette Bloch-Tréfousse; they had two children, Nicole (1913) and Jean-Jacques (1916). Rouff retained his Swiss citizenship and also became a naturalized French citizen in 1930. He was a heavy pipe smoker and died of throat cancer on February 3, 1936 at the relatively young age of 57. Rouff wrote novels, plays, and poetry, as well as non-fiction, including biography, history and journalism. He may be best known today for his gastronomic writing. He and his friend Curnonsky (Maurice Edmond Sailland) together wrote the 28-volume ''La France gastronomique: Guide des merveilles culinaires et des bonnes auberges françaises'' (Gastronomic France: Guide to the culinary marvels and the good inns of France) between 1921 and 1928. The series was an inventory of regional French specialties and restaurant recommendations, and included more than 5,000 different recipes. The historian Julia Csergo writes that Curnonsky and Rouff "invented the 'gastronomic guide' with the publication of their Tour of Gastronomic France." Jean-Robert Pitte writes: Some consider Rouff's gastronomic novel, ''La vie et la passion de Dodin-Bouffant, gourmet'' (The Life and the Passion of Dodin-Bouffant, Gourmet), written before the First World War and published in 1924, to be his master work. French newspapers described the book variously as a "charming gastronomic fantasy" and "a small masterpiece." More recently literary scholar Lawrence R. Schehr called it "a hybrid work that sits somewhere between fiction and cookbooks, menus, and Food TV." The enduring popularity of ''Dodin-Bouffant is clear, as it went through 50 French editions between 1924 and 2010. It was translated into English by "Claude" and was published in London in 1961 and the following year in New York. The English translation then went out of print until 2002. Rouff was a founding member, with Curnonsky, of the Académie des gastronomes in 1928. ''Comoedia'' called Curnonsky and Rouff "twin brothers in literature in general and in gastronomy in particulier." Throughout 1924, Curnonsky and Rouff wrote and edited a special one-page section of ''Comoedia'' entitled "Le Beau Voyage et la Bonne Auberge," which appeared every Saturday and featured articles on gastronomy, regional cuisines, and tourism. Rouff was made a Knight of the Legion of Honor (Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur), France's highest civilian honor, in 1921. Upon his death, ''Le Petit'' ''Journal'' praised him as "one of the princes of gastronomy."Select bibliography
*''Les hautaines'' (1896) *''Les Moulins à vent'' (1919) *''La Vie et la passion de Dodin-Bouffant, gourmet'' (1924) *''The Passionate Epicure:'' ''La Vie et la Passion de Dodin-Bouffant, Gourmet'' (2002), translated by Claude, with a preface by Lawrence Durrell and introduction by Jeffrey Steingarten. * ''La France gastronomique, guide des merveilles culinaires et des bonnes auberges françaises'', with Curnonsky (Maurice Edmond Sailland), 28 vols. (1921-1928) * ''Les Mines de charbon en France au XVIIIe siècle'', 1744-1791 (1922) * ''Voyage au monde à l'envers'' (1923) * ''Journey To The Inverted World'' (2011) (Voyage au Monde à l'Envers by Marcel Rouff (1923)) translated byReferences
Further reading
* Heurteux, Maurice. ''Eloge de Marcel Rouff'' prononcé à l'Académie des gastronomes, le 10 novembre 1959 (1960) * Csergo, Julia. "The Emergence of Regional Cuisines", in ''Food: A Culinary History,'' eds. Jean-Louis Flandrin & Massimo Montanari. English edition, Albert Sonnenfeld (1999), p. 510. ISBN 978-0231111553 *Philippe Gillet, ''Soyons Français à table! : petit manuel de civilité nouvelle, pour cultiver l'art d'être à table'', Paris : Editions Payot & Rivages, 1994. Article Dodin-Bouffant p. 16