Welcome to the fifth and final blog post on How to Begin Recording Your Life Story by J.Q. Rose. Today I want to summarize the salient points in this presentation to remind you of how important your life story is. Your experiences should be shared whether they are light-hearted, serious, instructive, or just down-right delightful reading. Click on part to link you back to the complete blog post on that subject.
At the end of this post, I included a Bibliography of books I think that will help you and inspire you to write your story. Readers are writers and these examples are great reading. Please suggest a book on writing or a memoir to add to the list. I'm always looking for new books to share with friends and family, and especially life story writers!
A Summary of the How to Begin Recording Your Life Story Series
Part 1 What
is memoir/life story, why record it, spark your memories
~A memoir or life story fleshes out your story
revealing your memories, but also emotions
Don't try to tell it all from the very
beginning. Write in vignettes or snapshots of your life.
A memoir can be recorded by writing your life
story or by telling your story using an audio file e.g. mP3 or video format.
~A memoir can be recorded by writing your life
story or by telling your story using an audio file e.g. mP3 or video format.
Can you guess what car sported these tail lights? Image courtesy of Matt Banks FreeDigitalPhotos.net |
~Your memoir can comfort and assure someone else
knowing how you faced and defeated problems in your life, demonstrated grace in
situations, and found joy in living an ordinary life.
~Seeing your life through the lens of time,
people’s actions, emotions, and words become more clear to you than when you
actually lived the moments.
~You will preserve the family history as well as
telling the “real” story of historical events and how they affected your ordinary
life.
~You will discover revisiting your life is a lot
of fun!
~To help you spark memories and track notes on
stories you remember, make a Memory Bank.
~Spark your memory by using a time line, life
stages, photos, and writing prompts.
Part 2 Opening up your memories and organizing your story
~Use free writing to open up your memories.
~After writing several stories, organize them
using themes you will discover in those stories, arrange in chronological
order, or relate your present life to past experiences.
Vintage Typewriter Image courtesy of koratmember FreeDigitalPhotos.net |
~Always include the five w’s in your writing-- who, what, where, when, why, and how.
~Show, don’t tell your stories.
~Use the five senses and your feelings to add
interest and to draw the reader into the scene..
Part 3 Editing
and publishing
~After writing your story, go back and make it
better by tightening up the story and checking for grammar and spelling errors.
~When writing a memoir/life story, the writer
must tell the truth at all times. For if the truth is not told, what is the
point in writing the story?
~If you decide to publish your memoir, I listed
some places for you to submit. Find
more by searching online or by visiting your library.
Part 4 Using
writing, audio, and video to record your story
~There’s more than
one way to record your story. Writing, making a video, recording an audio file
are all ways to tell your story. Choose one or try all of them to see what fits
you.
Thanks so
much for visiting. Has this series inspired you to begin recording your story?
I hope you will take a few ideas with you so some day you will sit down to record your life to share with others.
I am always ready
to help you get started. Email me with questions at jqrose02 at gmail dot com
or leave a comment below.
# # # #
WRITING YOUR LIFE STORY--BIBLIOGRAPHY
HELPFUL BOOKS ON WRITING
Albert,
Susan Wittig. Writing from Life: Telling Your Soul’s Story
Baldwin,
Christina. Life’s Companion: Journal Writing as a Spiritual Quest
Corey,
Judy. Storysharing: A Bridge Between
Generations
Daniel,
Lois. How to Write Your Own Life
Story
Goldberg,
Natalie. Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within
Heilbrun,
Carolyn. Writing a Woman’s Life
Strunk,
William and E.B.White. The Elements
of Style
Zinsser,
William. Inventing the Truth: the Art and Craft of Memoir
JOURNALING
Sarton,
May. Journal of a Solitude
Baker,
Russell. Growing Up
Bush,
Barbara. Barbara Bush: A Memoir
Buck,
Frank All in a Lifetime
Chaplin,
Charles. My Autobiography
Dillard,
Annie. An American Childhood
Downing,
Christine. Journeying through
Menopause
Frank,
Anne. The Diary of a Young Girl
Gilbert,
Elizabeth. eat, pray, love
Goldberg,
Natalie. Long Quiet Highway : Waking Up in America
Gordon,
Ruth. Myself Among Others
Grogan,
John. Marley and Me
Hayes,
Helen. On Reflection
Keller,
Helen. Story of My Life
King,
Coretta Scott. My Life with Martin
Luther King, Jr.
Marshall,
Catherine. Beyond Ourselves
Moses,
Anna Mary. Grandma Moses, My Life’s Story
Norris,
Kathleen. Family Gathering
O’Reilly,
Bill. A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity
Roosevelt,
Eleanor. On My Own
TenBoom,
Corey. The Hiding Place
Weisel,
Elie. Night
4 comments:
This is so helpful. I always wondered how others did theirs, having noted that the bios weren't in chronological order. But that makes sense. It's not about starting at day one and moving forward from there.
Hi, J Q! Thanks for sharing all of these posts about recording one's life story. It has been helpful.
Joylene, I have an author friend whose memoir is just one year in her life with the theme being the year she was 16 and lived in Samoa. Excellent story!! Using a theme is an interesting way to organize the stories into a book. Thanks for stopping by.
Susanne, so happy to know the blog posts have been helpful. Now get to writing those stories! LOL..Thank you.
Post a Comment