Louis-Ferdinand Destouches, the man whom the literary world would come to know by his pseudonym, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, was born May 27, 1894, in Courbevoie, France. An only child, Céline was raised by his mother, Marguerite-Louise-Céline Guilloux, and his father, Ferdinand-Auguste Destouches. He attended local schools in the Paris suburb of Passage Choiseul, before being sent to study in England and Germany. In 1912, Céline joined the French cavalry, serving as a sergeant until he was wounded in World War I. After his injury, Céline received a medal of honor and was sent to London to work in the passport office of the French Consulate. It was in London that Céline married his first of three wives, Suzanne Nebout. The marriage lasted roughly one year, ending in 1916 when Céline was discharged from the military and left London to work for a trading company in West Africa.
Returning to France in 1917, Céline began his medical studies at the University of Rennes in 1919; in the same year, he married his second wife, Edith Follet. The marriage ended in 1925 when Céline abandoned his wife and their daughter, Collette. For the next three years, Céline traveled across the globe as a doctor for the League of Nations. In 1928, he returned to France and set up a private practice as a doctor for the poor in Clichy. It was at this time that he began writing, hoping to augment the meager income of his medical work.
His first novel, Voyage au bout de la nuit ( Journey to the End of the Night ), published in 1932, was a popular and critical success and received the Theophraste Renaudot Prize in 1933. Other successful novels include Mort à credit (1936; Death on the Installment Plan ), D’un chateau à l’autre (1957; Castle to Castle ), Nord (1960; North ), and Rigodon (1969; Rigadoon ). The works are marked by an abrasive honesty, rage, and brutal humor, reflecting the horrors Céline faced throughout his life, from fighting on the German front during World War I, to treating the sick and poor in the suburbs of Paris.
In addition to his highly autobiographical novels, Céline wrote several anti-Semitic political pieces, including Bagatelles pour un massacre (1937; Trifles for a Massacre ), L’école des cadavres (1938; School for Corpses ), and Les beaux draps (1941; A Nice Mess ). As World War II drew to a close, the French government denounced Céline as a traitor because of his political pieces. Fearing for his life, Céline fled France in 1944 with his third wife, Lucette. He was arrested in Denmark by orders of the French government and imprisoned there for over a year. Convicted of treason in 1951, the couple remained in Denmark until a military tribunal granted Céline amnesty. Céline returned to France and settled again in a suburb of Paris, where he continued writing and working as a doctor for the underprivileged until his death in 1961.
From the guide to the Milton Hindus Collection of Louis-Ferdinand Céline TXRC04-A4., 1937-1950, (The University of Texas at Austin, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center)