His interest in wine began in 1967, when he spent a month abroad during his Christmas vacation, visiting a girlfriend (who is now his wife of 30 years) at the University of Strasbourg[?] in Alsace, France.
By 1975, he began to think about writing about wine and commencing his own "independent, consumer's guide," largely because of the paucity of reliable information on wine quality. Friends and family advised that his career in law should be given top priority, and that wine writing was a romantic, unprofitable profession.
Nevertheless, by 1978, the concept of a wine publication was formulated. The first issue of The Wine Advocate[?], a complimentary issue, was sent out to mailing lists purchased from several major wine retailers. The initial number of charter subscribers in August, 1978, was less than 600.
Now, over twenty years later, The Wine Advocate has over 40,000 subscribers, in every state in the United States, and in over 37 foreign countries. Today, virtually every knowledgeable observer agrees that The Wine Advocate exerts the most significant influence on the serious wine consumer's buying habits and trends not only in America, but in France, England, Switzerland, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Russia, Mexico, Brazil, and China. Additionally, The Wine Advocate is translated into the French language.
In addition to doing the writing and tasting for The Wine Advocate, which is published bi-monthly in Parkton, Maryland, Mr. Parker has been a contributing editor for Food and Wine Magazine[?]. He has also written periodically for the English magazine The Field and has been the wine critic for France's L'Express[?] magazine, the first time a non-Frenchman has held this position.
In November, 1985 his first book Bordeaux was published by Simon and Schuster[?]. Bordeaux went into six printings, was a selection of the Book of the Month Club[?], and received international critical acclaim. An English edition of Bordeaux was published by the London firm of Dorling, Kindersely, Ltd[?]. It won the prestigious Glenfiddich Award[?] as England's top wine book of 1986. The Paris-based firm of Solar published Bordeaux in France in 1989, where the book promptly was reprinted three times. Moreover, France's Book of the Month Club, the largest in the world, made Bordeaux its "selection of the month" in January, 1991. Foreign language editions of Bordeaux have been published in Japan, Germany, and Sweden.
In 1987, Simon and Schuster published two more wine books by Mr. Parker, Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide[?] and The Wines of the Rhône Valley and Provence[?]. The latter book won the Tastemaker's Award[?] in 1989 as the top wine book of the year published in America and The Wine Guild's[?] Wine Book of the Year Award in The United Kingdom.
In April, 1989, his second Wine Buyer's Guide was published, and his fifth book, Burgundy, was published in 1990. Burgundy was also published in both France and England in 1991. In the fall of 1991, a revised and greatly expanded edition of Bordeaux was published. It has appeared in Japanese, German, and French editions. In 1992, it was the winner of the IACP[?] Award (International Association of Cooking Professionals) as the top wine book of the year. Also in 1992, Maryland's Loyola College[?] recognized Mr. Parker as the "Marylander of the Year."
In 1993, the third edition of Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide was published. The German language edition of Bordeaux won that country's top prize for books on wine and gastronomy[?], the "Goldene Feder[?]." In France, the 1994 French language edition of Bordeaux spent three months on France's "Best Seller" list. In 1997/1998, Le Guide Parker (the French language edition of his buyer's guide) spent 27 weeks on France's top ten list of books.
Robert Parker has been profiled in such major magazines as Time, Newsweek, Atlantic Monthly, People, Money, The Traveler[?], Changing Times[?], Esquire[?], GQ, Business Week[?], Smart Money[?], and The Robb Report[?], and in such notable newspapers as USA Today, The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The Baltimore Sun[?], The London Sunday Times[?], The Sunday Telegraphe[?], The Independent, Le Journal de Dimanche[?], and L'Express[?]. His writing philosophy has remained simple: to provide meaningful, comprehensive, independent, accurate, critical commentaries and opinions on fine wines and fine wine values.
In 1993, Parker received the Wine and Vine Communication Award from Moet-Hennessey[?] for his French language editions of Bordeaux and Burgundy. In 1995, Parker was made the third honorary citizen of the Rhone Valley's[?] most important wine village, Chateauneuf du Pape[?], the other two recipients of this honor being Frederic Mistral and Marcel Pagnol[?].
In 1995, Parker published the fourth edition of Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide, a book that received huge commercial and critical success. It was republished in England and France, where it is called The Guide Parker. In 1997, his ninth book, The Wines of the Rhone Valley[?], was published in both English and French. In 1998, his tenth book, the 3rd edition of Bordeaux, was published in Germany, England, France, Japan and, of course, the United States. In May, 1998, Robert Parker was awarded top honors by the James Beard Foundation[?] (which awards the highest honors to food and beverage professionals) for the "Wine and Spirits Professional of 1997."
On March 29, 1999, President Jacques Chirac signed a decree authorizing Robert M. Parker, Jr. to be a Chevalier dans l'Ordre de la Legion d'Honneur[?]. He was decorated directly by President Jacques Chirac at a ceremony at the Elysee Palace[?] on June 22, 1999. President Chirac, in bestowing France's highest honor, stated that "Robert Parker is the most followed and influential critic of French wines in the world, something I (President Chirac) witnessed recently when choosing wine for President Clinton, who automatically referred to Robert Parker as his reference for making a proper wine buying decision." In 1993, the late President Francois Mitterand made Robert Parker a Chevalier dans l'Ordre National du Merite[?]. The Legion of Honor[?] was created by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802 to honor the highest level of achievement to France. Robert Parker is one of only a handful of foreigners to have received France's two highest Presidential honors.
Robert M. Parker, Jr, who, in February, 1999, was profiled in a two-part front page article in the Los Angeles Times[?] by their Pulitzer Prize winning media critic, David Shaw[?], has written eleven books on wine that have been best sellers not only in the United States, but also in their translated versions in France, Japan, Germany, Sweden and Russia. He is also author of the independent consumer's guide to fine wine, The Wine Advocate, which he has written and published for over two decades. In the Los Angeles Times, David Shaw called Parker "a fierce champion of the wine consumer," "the most powerful critic of any kind, any where," and "a sensualist, passionate lover of wine, who is largely responsible for the vastly improved quality of wines made throughout the western world and for the exponential growth in interest, knowledge and sophistication of those who drink wine."
Robert Parker lives in the countryside of northern Maryland with his wife of 30 years, Patricia, his daughter, Maia, and various basset hounds[?] and English bulldogs[?].
Acknowledgment:
The above text was generously provided courtesy of eRobertParker.com (http://www.erobertparker.com)
, Robert Parker's website. Visit it for
online access to a searchable database of wine tastings dating back over
a decade.
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