Memoir: A History

This comprehensive book focused on the history of memoir writing by journalist and English professor Ben Yagoda begins by defining autobiography and memoirs as “a book understood by its author, its publisher, and its readers to be a factual account of the author’s life,” while the memoir encompasses “books that cover the entirety or some portion of it.” The modern popularity of the genre sparks Yagoda’s exploration tracing back to the fifth-century classic The Confessions of Saint Augustine and the groundbreaking autobiographies of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Frederick Douglass, as well as looking to contemporary examples of addiction, redemption, and canine memoirs, and those deemed as fake memoirs. Readers interested in reading and writing memoirs will enjoy the reflections on the ways memory and truth can be interpreted, and who decides how one’s life is remembered.



























