Memoir

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 1994

Genre Book, Nonfiction

Themes Appearance & Reality

Tags Creative Nonfiction, Mystery & Crime Fiction, Southern Literature, World History, Travel Literature, Classic Fiction

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, John Berendt’s 1994 bestseller, is a combination of travelogue, true crime, autobiography, and Southern gothic. The nonfiction book chronicles Berendt’s experience living in Savannah, Georgia, during a sensational murder trial. Just as gripping as the drama is the author’s exploration into Savannah culture and the unusual array of people whom he meets during his eight years living there. It was an immediate success when first published, staying... Read Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil Summary

Publication year 2015

Genre Book, Nonfiction

Tags Sociology, Humor, Psychology, Psychology, Relationships, Romance

Aziz Ansari’s Modern Romance, published in 2015, is a nonfiction work that combines statistics, interviews, and comedy to explore the current landscape of dating in the modern age. Ansari is an actor and comedian, as well as a writer. He got his start on television in the role of Tom Haverford in Parks and Recreation, which ran on NBC. He starred in Human Giant and went on to perform in several movies. His first comedy... Read Modern Romance Summary

Publication year 2013

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Themes Mothers, Daughters & Sons, Self Discovery, Family, Sexual Identity, Race, Coming of Age, Perseverance, Forgiveness, Guilt, Love

Tags Gender & Feminism, Race & Racism, Women`s Studies, Biography

Publication year 2006

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Themes Community, Friendship

Tags Anthropology, Action & Adventure

Monique and the Mango Rains: Two Years with a Midwife in Mali is a work of narrative nonfiction written by Kris Holloway and published in 2006. Told through Holloway’s perspective, the book recounts the incredible life and death of a young Malian woman named Monique Dembele and her unlikely friendship with Holloway, who came to Mali as a young American woman serving in the Peace Corps in 1989.The book follows Monique, a midwife who strives... Read Monique and the Mango Rains Summary

Publication year 2013

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Tags Gender & Feminism, Women`s Studies, World History, Politics & Government, Biography

Sonia Sotomayor (b. June 25, 1954) is an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Born and raised in the Bronx, NY to Puerto Rican parents, she graduated from Princeton University summa cum laude in 1976 and Yale University’s law school in 1979. After four and a half years working as an assistant district attorney in New York City, she joined Pavia & Harcourt, a small Manhattan law firm, eventually becoming a partner. In... Read My Beloved World Summary

Publication year 1855

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Tags US History, Race & Racism, World History, Classic Fiction, Biography

Frederick Douglass’s memoir My Bondage and My Freedom (1855), published a decade after the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (1845), is his revision of his original narrative. Written during a period after Douglass attained freedom, it is more revealing than his first memoir and more politically sophisticated. Douglass was older and better educated when he wrote this book. Conversely, he had composed his Narrative in response to a skeptical public, as proof of... Read My Bondage and My Freedom Summary

Publication year 2012

Genre Graphic Novel/Book, Nonfiction

Themes Mental Health, Economics, Nature Versus Nurture

Tags Crime & Law, Trauma & Abuse, Horror & Suspense, Mystery & Crime Fiction, Biography

My Friend Dahmer is a graphic novel/memoir by American cartoonist and writer Derf Backderf, known for utilizing darkness and shading in his comic strips and graphic novels. Evolving from a 24-page cartoon created in 2002, My Friend Dahmer (2012) depicts the author’s memories of his high school friend, notorious serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, in novelistic form—exploring the ways Dahmer himself could have been helped and his 17 murders prevented. The graphic novel was adapted into... Read My Friend Dahmer Summary

Publication year 2002

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Tags Sports, Southern Literature, Biography

My Losing Season is a 2002 memoir by author Pat Conroy. The book largely chronicles Conroy’s senior season as the starting point guard and captain of the 1966-67 Citadel Bulldogs basketball team. The value of losing is the book’s overarching theme, and the author’s coming-of-age is a strong secondary theme. Conroy’s relationship with his abusive father, his love of basketball, and his team’s rapport with its authoritarian coach are the central focuses throughout the memoir... Read My Losing Season Summary

Publication year 2013

Genre Book, Nonfiction

Tags Middle Eastern History, Jewish Literature, World History, Travel Literature, Politics & Government, Religion & Spirituality

My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel is a 2013 work of historical nonfiction by Israeli author and journalist Ari Shavit. It was a New York Times Bestseller in 2013. Shavit’s book explains the history of Zionism in Palestine: its triumphs and tragedies, the creation of the Israeli state, Palestinian and Middle Eastern conflicts, and assessments of both Israeli and Jewish futures. Shavit combines Zionist history with first-hand reflections on pivotal moments. He... Read My Promised Land Summary

Publication year 1845

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Themes Race, Equality, Power & Greed

Tags American Literature, Race & Racism, US History, Education, Education, World History, Classic Fiction, Biography

Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass is an autobiography by Frederick Douglass that was first published in 1845. Douglass escaped from slavery in 1838 and became a prominent abolitionist, orator, and writer. His autobiography describes his experiences under slavery and his eventual freedom. The book was widely read and influenced public opinion in favor of the abolition of slavery. It remains one of the most read memoirs from the antebellum period. The autobiography includes... Read Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass Summary

Publication year 1999

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Tags Sociology, Journalism, Mystery & Crime Fiction, World History, Biography

Newjack is a nonfiction book written by Ted Conover. Conover, a journalist, spends a year as a correction officer in Sing Sing Prison and keeps a detailed record of events in a spiral notebook. The story takes place largely at Sing Sing, a historic prison located in Ossining, New York. Sing Sing is a palimpsest of structures dating back to the 1800s: spread across fifty-five acres, the prison includes massive cell blocks, a solitary-housing unit... Read Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing Summary

Publication year 1983

Genre Book, Nonfiction

Themes Colonialism, Religion & Spirituality, Community, Coming of Age, Childhood & Youth, The Past, Family, Shame & Pride, Hope

Tags Women`s Studies, Education, Education, US History, Coming of Age, Religion & Spirituality, American Literature, Anthropology, Anthropology, World History, Arts & Culture

Publication year 1979

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Tags Asian Literature, Japanese Literature, Asian History, World War II, Military & War, World History, Biography

Nisei Daughter recounts Monica Sone’s childhood in Seattle’s Japanese American community and her experience in the internment camps that housed residents of Japanese ethnicity between 1942 and 1946. The memoir, which has become a seminal text in Asian American studies, was first published in 1953 and then republished in 1979 and 2014, each time with an introduction that reframes the work in its context.The memoir begins with Sone’s realization that she is “a Japanese” when... Read Nisei Daughter Summary

Publication year 2017

Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction

Tags US History, Health, Poverty, Science & Nature, Biography

No Apparent Distress: A Doctor’s Coming of Age on the Front Lines of American Medicine is author Rachel Pearson’s 2017 account of her intensive medical education and the initial years of her career as a physician. She focuses on stories that illustrate her themes of medical ethics, regret, depression, bias against the poor, and racism. Rather than bogging the reader down in medical jargon, Pearson uses anecdotes to convey her experiences to a layman audience.Pearson... Read No Apparent Distress Summary

Publication year 2009

Genre Book, Nonfiction

Themes Environment

Tags Sociology, Education, Education, Climate Change, Biography

No Impact Man: The Adventures of a Guilty Liberal Who Attempts to Save the Planet, and the Discoveries He Makes About Himself and Our Way of Life in the Process is an autobiography published in 2009. Author Colin Beavan, tired of being a liberal who only lectures his wife about not wearing fur, decides to dedicate himself, his wife Michelle, and their toddler Isabella to a year of creating no impact on the environment. His... Read No Impact Man Summary

Publication year 1996

Genre Book, Nonfiction

Themes Fate, Good & Evil, Community

Tags Sociology, Mystery & Crime Fiction, Social Justice, Politics & Government, Biography

No Matter How Loud I Shout is a work of nonfiction written by Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist Edward Humes and published in 1996. This work comprises the author’s ethnographical observations and participations in the Los Angeles juvenile justice system for the year of 1994. Humes asserts that the names of juveniles have been changed in accordance with state laws regarding confidentiality; however, everything else is true, and reported in the allegedly unbiased style of 1990s investigative journalism... Read No Matter How Loud I Shout Summary

Publication year 1955

Genre Essay Collection, Nonfiction

Themes Race, Hate & Anger

Tags Sociology, Existentialism, Black Arts Movement, Black Lives Matter, Race & Racism, World History, Social Justice, Classic Fiction, Politics & Government, Biography

Notes of a Native Son is a collection of nonfiction essays by James Baldwin. Baldwin originally published the essays individually in various literary and cultural commentary magazines between 1948 and 1955. The Beacon Press first republished the essays as Notes of a Native Son in 1955. This study guide refers to the 2012 Beacon Press edition of Notes of a Native Son. Citations to page numbers, however, come from the volume The Price of the... Read Notes of a Native Son Summary