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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: autobiographers, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Help Me Write: Autobiographies

Author Kevin J. Hayes has been very busy writing American Literature: A Very Short Introduction, but he needs your help. Find out what you can do below. Check out his past posts here.

In a contribution to Esquire in 1972, Tom Wolfe called autobiography “the one form of nonfiction that has always had most of the powers of the novel.” The study of autobiography has since emerged as an important field in American literary history. Of course, some of the major works in the discipline — Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography comes to mind — have received serious critical treatment for decades. More recently, many other autobiographical writings have been recognized for their literary artistry.

With his comparison, Wolfe was not necessarily saying that autobiographers fictionalized their life stories. Some undoubtedly do, but for most autobiographers, the writing process is a matter of selection, not creation. They start with the various events that shaped their lives and choose the ones they want to shape the story of their lives. Franklin, for example, omitted or downplayed some famous events in his life to emphasize ones displaying himself as a humble and hardworking printer. He made himself into an example to be imitated. The scheme worked. His autobiography is the prototypical story of the self-made man. To a certain extent, all autobiography offers examples for emulation.

Franklin’s may be the most important autobiography in American literature, but the genre seems significant enough to deserve its own chapter in my forthcoming American Literature: A Very Short Introduction. I have received such good responses from my earlier blogs that I am anxious to hear what you have to say about autobiography. I intend to start with Franklin and then flashback to the seventeenth century to discuss Puritan spiritual autobiography, captivity narratives, and slave narratives. After that, I need help with structure and content. I would like to subdivide the chapter into different types of autobiography. What other categories are significant enough to deserve separate subsections? Should I include a section on presidential memoirs? (Does that mean I’ll have to read Bill Clinton’s My Life? What am I getting myself into?) Who else’s autobiographies should I include? What do I do about ghost-written or co-written autobiographies?

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2. Myths About Bestsellers, Awards Shows, and Self-Publishing

The Burning LandIt's the eve of the National Book Awards--one of the most dramatic honors a published, well-respected writer can receive--and I'm writing about self-publishing.

I think the hype around bestsellers and the hullabaloo surrounding writing awards creates the false impression that writing will somehow make you rich and famous. If you're thinking about self-publishing, don't do it because you're looking for money and awards--it's dangerous lie that will distract you from the love of writing that got you here in the first place.

Over at Writer Beware, novelist Victoria Strauss is blogging about the pitfalls of self publishing, debunking myths about the profitability and popularity of our humble profession. Read her essay and follow the links as you think about print-on-demand or self-publishing. Take your morning dose of reality:

"Brunonia Barry's self-pubbed debut novel ... has garnered a lot of press and spawned a flurry of blog posts. (Scratch a self-publishing success story, though, and you usually find a special circumstance of some sort--this article enumerates some of the advantages Barry had that most self-pubbed authors don't.) ... there are the shills trying to make a buck on the writerly pipe dreams that inevitably result from this kind of hype."

I'll be covering the National Book Awards with Marydell, Levi Asher, Ed Champion, and Sarah Weinman, but I won't be looking for get-rich-quick or get-famous-quick schemes. I'll come back with practical stories about how to keep writing because you love it, not because you expect to win the novel-writing lottery.

 

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