Literary Memoir



Memoir

Literary memoir. Originates in memory, in personal experience. And the contract with the reader is that you’re telling the truth as you know it and have discovered it and believe it to be true. Usually takes a portion of a life; childhood, for example, or deals with a specific theme or experience –. It's the disingenuously frank memoir of an old guy who still feels young, trying to make a point and remind you who he was in the literary hey-day of NYC in the 50s 60s 70s, when he was the discoverer of Mario Puzo, friend of James Salter, boxer against Norman Mailer, etc etc etc. A list: But Enough About Me: Why We Read Other People's Lives, by Nancy K. Miller 'presents the definitive defense of the. Memory and Narrative: The Weave of Life-Writing, by James Olney How Our Lives Become Stories: Making Selves, by John Eakin Self-Same Songs: Autobiographical Performances.


By Jasmin Darznik

Grand Central, 2011

Literary Agents For Women's Memoirs

  1. Both a literary agent and a founding partner of Fuse Literary, Gordon has many.
  2. In the past, autobiographies, especially those of literary figures, often began with such memories— fragmentary, mysterious, visually enigmatic. Here is a perfect specimen, one that opens Childhood Years: A Memoir (serialized 1955-1956) by the outstanding Japanese novelist, Jun’ichiro Tanizaki, who was born in 1886. He begins by noting that.

By Colin Dayan

LARB Books, 2019

By Diane di Prima

Viking Penguin, 1998

By Lillian Faderman

Bloomsbury, 2020

By Anika Fajardo

University of Minnesota Press, 2019

By Darcy Gaechter

Pegasus, 2020

By Andrea Hutton

Harper Wave, 2015

By Maxine Hong Kingston

Knopf, 1989

By Deborah Layton

Doubleday, 1998

By Jennifer McGaha

Literary Memoir Agents 2020

Sourcebooks, 2018

By Cecily McMillan

Nation Books, 2016

By Nikki Meredith

Kensington, 2018

By Anchee Min

Bloomsbury, 2014

By Pat Montandon

Harper, 2007

By Frederic Morton

Simon & Schuster, 2005

By Laura Roppe

Avalon Publishing Group Hachette, 2012

By Lisa See

St. Martin's, 1995

By Leanne Shirtliffe

Skyhorse, 2013

By Jane Vandenburgh

Counterpoint Hachette, 2013

By Pat Welsh

Chronicle Books, 1996

By Natalee Woods

Amberjack Publishing, 2018

Literary Memoir

By Irvin Yalom

Basic Books, 2015

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This week saw the release of Paul Auster’s second memoir, Winter Journal, wherein he turns his eye from the portrait of fatherhood he explored in The Invention of Solitude to his mother’s life, and her death, and the ever encroaching inevitability of his own death. Inspired by this new and deeply affecting work by one of our greatest contemporary authors, we started thinking about our favorite literary memoirs, from the contemporary to the classic, those that suck us in and leave us gasping for breath as well or better than any novel. Click through to see the books we chose, and if we’ve missed your own favorite, make a case for it in the comments — we can always use another book to read!

Speak, Memory, Vladimir Nabokov

Nabokov’s memoir is an account of his childhood and the years before his emigration to the United States in 1940 — but that’s not quite right. More importantly, the book is an account of Nabokov’s art as much as it is an example of it, a study of the themes and symbols that make up his mind as they make up the book. As ever, Nabokov’s prose is unimpeachable, brilliant, devastating, and his almost petulant, playful manner makes even lists of relatives seem fascinating.

The Liars’ Club, Mary Karr

Karr’s funny, terrifying, scalpel-sharp first book was one of the first to open the contemporary memoir floodgates: yes, the public screamed, wept, whispered. Yes, we want more of this. You will feel the same way as this incomparable firebrand leads you through her swampy childhood. Lucky for you, if you’re a first time reader, you’ll have two more of Karr’s memoirs to go when you’re through. They could have made this list too, but we’ve got to give other writers a fighting chance, you know?

The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion

In this heartbreaking memoir, Official National Treasure Joan Didion writes about the death of her husband, John Gregory Dunne, and the “magical thinking” that followed: “We might expect that we will be prostrate, inconsolable, crazy with loss,” she writes. “We do not expect to be literally crazy, cool customers who believe that their husband is about to return and need his shoes.” Already a master of writing about loss, this memoir is an essential addition to Didion’s oeuvre.

Maus, Art Spiegelman

Though there are many deeply affecting and wonderful Holocaust memoirs that might have made this list, our favorite will forever be Maus, with its harrowing story wrapped in Spiegelman’s pitch-perfect illustrations. You’d think that imagining the characters as animals would make the horrors of the story seem less intense, more palatable, but in fact it’s the opposite — in true Understanding Comics style, the iconic, blank faces of the mice only allow us to put ourselves in their shoes that much more easily.

The Woman Warrior, Maxine Hong Kingston

In this beautiful, bitter memoir, Kingston blends traditional Chinese folk tales — her mother’s “talk-stories” — with her often difficult experiences growing up Chinese American in Stockton, California. What is a ghost? What is a woman’s worth? Who is she? Kingston’s prose burns on the page as she investigates.

A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway

Published posthumously in 1964, this memoir is made up of Hemingway’s collected accounts of his time as an expat writer in the 1920s, largely in Paris, hanging out with Gertrude Stein, the Fitzgeralds, Ezra Pound, and a host of other characters, all engaged with padding their now-fat legacies. As spare and simply lovely as his novels, it’s enough to make any aspiring writer want to pack up and move to the city of light.

Darkness Visible, William Styron

One of the books that led the memoir charge, Styron’s candid, elegant 1990 memoir of his serious depression — and recovery — is both an extremely personal story of exploring the depths of despair and a meditation on depression in a wider cultural context. It’s still one of the best things we’ve ever read on the topic.

This Boy’s Life, Tobias Wolff

In Wolff’s elegantly rendered, captivating memoir, he describes a childhood spent wandering the country with his itinerant mother, on the run from an abusive ex-boyfriend — until she meets and marries an equally unsuitable man, with whom the teenaged Wolff engages in furious battle. But he’s also fighting his own battle of self-invention. Darkly comic, deeply piercing and as satisfying as any novel, This Boy’s Life is an irrefutable classic.

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou

This memoir, the first in six volumes of autobiography, is a time-honored classic for a reason. Poetic and incredibly inspiring, the reader watches Angelou develop from a victim to a confident, capable young woman as she learns to process and deal with the racism of the world around her. With her younger self often referred to as “a symbolic character for every black girl growing up in America,” Angelou has undoubtedly changed many lives with this book.

Homage to Catalonia, George Orwell

Orwell’s gripping account of his time in the Spanish Civil War, told with his trademark journalist’s wink, is one of his best. Unflinching and honest, Orwell approaches his experience without agenda, recording things as he sees them. As Philip Mairet once said, “It shows us the heart of innocence that lies in revolution; also the miasma of lying that, far more than the cruelty, takes the heart out of it.”