Our extensive memoir collection spans decades and features the personal stories of award-winning authors from around the world. Read on to learn about Sarah M. Broom’s childhood in New Orleans in The Yellow House; activist Ishmael Beah’s experiences as a boy in war-torn Sierra Leone in A Long Way Gone; and clinical psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison and her experiences living with bipolar disorder.
Publication year 2019
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Natural World: Animals, Self Discovery, Society: Community, Identity: Mental Health
Tags Action / Adventure, Animals, Sports, Trauma / Abuse / Violence, Science / Nature, Biography
Publication year 1995
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Values/Ideas: Religion & Spirituality
Tags Religion / Spirituality, History: U.S., Southern Literature, Journalism, Southern Gothic, History: World, Biography
Dennis Covington’s Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake Handling and Redemption in Southern Appalachia is a work of non-fiction, originally published in 1995. The narrative begins when Covington starts reporting on Glenn Summerford’s trial for the attempted murder of his wife, Darlene, by rattlesnake bite. Brother Glenn is a preacher in a snake-handling church in Scottsboro, Alabama, which is close to Covington’s home in Birmingham. Glenn is pleading that his wife tried to commit suicide and had... Read Salvation on Sand Mountain Summary
Publication year 2006
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Relationships: Family, Relationships: Friendship, Identity: Race
Tags Religion / Spirituality, Inspirational, Biography
Same Kind of Different as Me (2006) is a memoir written by Denver Moore and Ron Hall, with the assistance of Lynn Vincent. Employing a first-person point of view that switches between Moore and Hall in its chapters, the book tells the radically-different life stories of the two men—Moore spent most of his adult years being homeless or in prison, while Hall was a high-end art dealer—and how they were brought together thanks to Hall’s... Read Same Kind Of Different As Me Summary
Publication year 1987
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Identity: Race
Tags History: U.S., Civil Rights / Jim Crow, History: World, Education, Education
Separate Pasts: Growing Up White in the Segregated South (1998) is a memoir by the American author and historian Melton A. McLaurin, who describes coming of age as a white person in the segregated South. McLaurin was born in 1941 in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and grows up in the nearby town of Wade. The memoir takes place in the small town of Wade during the 1950s and focuses on the racism he witnessed at both individual... Read Separate Pasts Summary
Publication year 2016
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Society: Economics, Values/Ideas: Truth & Lies
Tags Business / Economics, Sports, Biography
Shoe Dog is a first-person memoir written by Nike cofounder Phil Knight. It was published in 2016. Shoe Dog primarily recounts the events from 1962, the year Knight traveled around the world as a young man, to 1980, the year Nike went public and Knight became a multimillionaire. The years in between are comprised of the struggles and challenges Knight faced as he worked to build the company that would ultimately be known worldwide as... Read Shoe Dog Summary
Publication year 2009
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Values/Ideas: Religion & Spirituality
Tags Religion / Spirituality, Education, Education, Business / Economics, Sociology, Psychology, Psychology, Philosophy, Philosophy, Self Help, Arts / Culture
Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry into the Value of Work, published in 2009, is an often personal and meditative pitch for a cultural recommitment to the vocational arts. As a mechanic with a doctorate in philosophy, author Matthew B. Crawford has lived both lives—that of the “knowledge worker” of white-collar culture and that of the manual laborer who solves the problems society faces on a daily basis. He uses the space of the book... Read Shop Class as Soulcraft Summary
Publication year 1990
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Themes Emotions/Behavior: Memory, Identity: Gender
Tags Arts / Culture, History: World
First published in 1990, the creative memoir Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood explores the childhood and adolescence of author Judith Ortiz Cofer. This study guide uses the second edition published in 1991 by Arte Público Press.Born in Puerto Rico, Cofer grew up moving between a Puerto Rican village and Paterson, New Jersey, where her father was stationed with the US Navy. Through a series of essays and poems, Cofer examines... Read Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance Of A Puerto Rican Childhood Summary
Publication year 2020
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Identity: Femininity, Identity: Disability, Self Discovery, Emotions/Behavior: Love, Values/Ideas: Equality, Emotions/Behavior: Shame & Pride
Tags Disability, Social Justice, Gender / Feminism, Biography
Publication year 2013
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Life/Time: Coming of Age, Emotions/Behavior: Grief, Life/Time: Mortality & Death
Tags Science / Nature, Humor, Grief / Death, Biography
Publication year 2015
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Identity: Race
Tags Journalism, Black Lives Matter, Race / Racism, Education, Education, History: U.S., Sociology, History: World, Social Justice, Politics / Government
Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County is a 2015 nonfiction book by Kristen Green about the closing of public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia from 1959 to 1964, following the 1954 United States Supreme Court ruling that school segregation is unconstitutional. During the five years the public schools were closed, black students in Prince Edward County largely went uneducated while a new private school for whites, Prince Edward Academy, opened. The book... Read Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County Summary
Publication year 1983
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Tags Asian Literature, Chinese Literature, Education, Education, Social Science, History: World, Politics / Government, Biography
Son of the Revolution (1983), written by Liang Heng with his wife, Judith Shapiro, is a memoir of the Chinese Cultural Revolution and is both the story of Liang’s own coming-of-age and a chronicle of China’s political and cultural upheaval following the Communist Party’s rise to power in the mid-1900s.Content Warning: The source material and this guide contain references to violence and death by suicide.Liang Heng is born in Changsha, a large city in central... Read Son of the Revolution Summary
Publication year 2004
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Society: War
Tags Gulf War, Military / War
After his brother Lenny joins the Marine Corps, Williams dreams of following in his footsteps. When Lenny dies a few years later, Williams joins the Marine Reserves. For a year he serves as a “weekend warrior,” while attending college, until, in August of 1990, Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi Army invades Kuwait. Williams’s unit is activated in November and he is forced to leave college and go to war.Through training, deployment, and eventually combat, Williams journeys toward... Read Spare Parts Summary
Publication year 2013
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Values/Ideas: Truth & Lies, Values/Ideas: Safety & Danger, Values/Ideas: Justice & Injustice, Relationships: Family, Identity: Mental Health, Emotions/Behavior: Courage
Tags Crime / Legal, Trauma / Abuse / Violence, Psychology, Mystery / Crime Fiction, Biography
Publication year 2003
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Values/Ideas: Order & Chaos
Tags History: European, History: World, Politics / Government, Biography
Stasiland, by Anna Funder, originally published in 2002, is the true account of life in East Germany during the Communist regime, from 1949 to 1990. It tells the stories of those who resisted and engaged in what has been called the most perfected surveillance state of all time.First, Funder visits Leipzig, Germany, to meet with Miriam Weber, a woman who was arrested by the Stasi, brutally interrogated, and who later tried to escape over the... Read Stasiland Summary
Publication year 2007
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Natural World: Food, Relationships: Mothers
Tags Women's Studies (Nonfiction), Asian Literature, Food, Biography
Stealing Buddha’s Dinner is a memoir by Bich Minh Nguyen that tells the story of her childhood in Grand Rapids, Michigan as a young Vietnamese refugee. Bich’s family, made up of her father; her grandmother, Noi; her sister, Anh; and her uncles, Chu Anh, Chu Cuong, and Chu Dai; flee to the United States from Vietnam in April 1975, just as Saigon is falling to the North Vietnamese. Her mother is left behind, and the... Read Stealing Buddha's Dinner Summary
Publication year 2011
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Themes Society: Community, Values/Ideas: Science & Technology, Relationships: Fathers, Life/Time: The Future
Tags Business / Economics, Technology, Science / Nature, History: World, Biography
Steve Jobs (2011) is an authorized biography written by Walter Isaacson about the life of the late Apple founder and tech revolutionary. Based on more than forty interviews with Jobs, the book is an in-depth exploration of who Jobs was, from the story of his birth and subsequent adoption to his massive success at the helm of Apple. Jobs himself personally requested that Isaacson write his biography on a phone call in 2004. By the... Read Steve Jobs Summary
Publication year 1920
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Tags WWI / World War I, Military / War, History: World, Classic Fiction, Biography
Storm of Steel, written by Ernst Jünger, is a memoir of World War I first published in German as In Stahlgewittern in 1920. The final revised edition came in 1961 and was translated into English in 1978. The book documents Jünger’s account as a German officer on the Western Front and begins the moment Jünger detrains in France, on December 27, 1914, at the age of 19. As the Introduction says: “It has no pacifist... Read Storm of Steel Summary
Publication year 2000
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Tags History: African , Immigration / Refugee, History: World, Health / Medicine, Biography
Strength in What Remains is a nonfiction book by Pulitzer Prize-winning nonfiction writer Tracy Kidder. It chronicles the story of a Burundian man named Deogratias (Deo). Deo, a Tutsi, survived a genocide that embroiled Burundi and Rwanda—especially in 1993-94. Deo fled the hospital where he had a medical school internship. Without any resources, he made his way to Rwanda only to be forced to escape violence there, return to Burundi, and finally travel to America... Read Strength in What Remains Summary
Publication year 1955
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Themes Values/Ideas: Religion & Spirituality, Emotions/Behavior: Shame & Pride
Tags Religion / Spirituality, Christian literature, Biography, Classic Fiction
Surprised by Joy is C.S. Lewis’s spiritual autobiography, tracing the steps that led up to his conversion to Christianity. This guide refers to the 1955 Harcourt Brace & Company/Harvest Books edition. Lewis was born in 1898 in Ireland and begins his story with his childhood in Belfast, where he and his family lived in a maze-like house full of empty attics and heaps of books. He was close with his older brother, and together they... Read Surprised by Joy Summary
Publication year 1973
Genre Biography, Nonfiction
Themes Values/Ideas: Music
Tags Psychology, Mental Illness, Science / Nature, Psychology, Biography, Classic Fiction
Sybil, by Flora Rheta Schreiber, tells the story of the recovery of the pseudonymous Sybil Dorsett (in real life, Shirley Mason), a woman who suffers from multiple personality disorder because of severe childhood trauma. Published in 1973, the book and the subsequent mini-series caused an immediate sensation, selling millions of copies and bringing the little-known disorder into Americans’ cultural awareness. The story claims to be nonfiction, but critics of the book, such as Debbie Nathan... Read Sybil Summary