Creative Nonfiction: Memoir vs. Autobiography vs. Biography
- Writing any type of nonfiction story can be a daunting task. As the author, you have the responsibility to tell a true story and share the facts as accurately as you can—while also making the experience enjoyable for the reader.
- There are three primary formats to tell a creative nonfiction story: memoir, autobiography, and biography. Each has its own distinct characteristics, so it’s important to understand the differences between them to ensure you’re writing within the correct scope.
Memoir
A memoir is a collection of personal memories
related to specific moments or experiences in the author’s life. Told from the
perspective of the author, memoirs are written in first person point of view.
The defining characteristic that sets memoirs
apart from autobiographies and biographies is its scope. While the other genres
focus on the entire timeline of a person’s life, memoirs structure
themselves on one aspect, such as addiction, parenting, adolescence,
disease, faith, etc.
They may tell stories from various moments in
the author’s life, but they should read like a cohesive story—not just a
re-telling of facts.
“You don’t want a voice that simply relates
facts to the reader. You want a voice that shows the reader what’s going on and
puts him or her in the room with the people you’re writing about.” – Kevan
Lyon in Writing a Memoir
Unlike autobiographies and biographies, memoirs
focus more on the author’s relationship to and feelings about his or her own
memories. Memoirs tend to read more like a fiction novel than a factual
account, and should include things like dialogue, setting, character
descriptions, and more.
Authors looking to write a memoir can glean
insight from both fiction and nonfiction genres. Although
memoirs tell a true story, they focus on telling an engaging narrative, just
like a novel. This gives memoir authors a little more flexibility to improve
upon the story slightly for narrative effect.
However, you should represent dialogue and
scenarios as accurately as you can, especially if you’re worried about libel
and defamation lawsuits.
Examples of popular memoirs include Eat,
Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert and The Glass Castle by
Jeannette Walls.
Key traits of a memoir:
- Written in 1st person
POV from the perspective of the author
- Less formal compared to autobiographies and biographies
- Narrow in scope or timeline
- Focused more on feelings and memories than facts
- More flexibility to change the story for effect
- Less formal compared to autobiographies and biographies
- Narrow in scope or timeline
- Focused more on feelings and memories than facts
- More flexibility to change the story for effect
Autobiography
Like a memoir, an autobiography is the author’s
retelling of his or her life and told in first person point of view, making the
author the main character of the story.
Autobiographies are also narrative nonfiction,
so the stories are true but also include storytelling elements such as a
protagonist (the author), a central conflict, and a cast of intriguing
characters.
Unlike memoirs, autobiographies focus more on
facts than emotions. Because of this, a collaborator often joins the project to
help the author tell the most factual, objective story possible.
While a memoir is limited in scope, an
autobiography details the author’s entire life up to the present. An
autobiography often begins when the author is young and includes detailed
chronology, events, places, reactions, movements and other relevant happenings
throughout the author’s life.
“In many people’s memoir, they do start when
they’re younger, but it isn’t an, ‘I got a dog, then we got a fish, and then I
learned to tie my shoes’…it isn’t that kind of detail.” – Linda Joy Meyers
in Memoir vs. Autobiography
The chronology of an autobiography is organized
but not necessarily in date order. For instance, the author may start from
current time and employ flashbacks or he/she may organize events thematically.
Autobiographers use many sources of information
to develop the story such as letters, photographs, and other personal
memorabilia. However, like a memoir, the author’s personal memory is the
primary resource. Any other sources simply enrich the story and relay accurate
and engaging experiences.
A good autobiography includes specific details
that only the author knows and provides context by connecting those details to
larger issues, themes, or events. This allows the reader to relate more
personally to the author’s experience.
Examples of popular autobiographies
include The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank and I
Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou.
Key traits of an autobiography:
- Written in 1st person
POV from the perspective of the author, occasionally with the help of a
collaborator
- More formal and objective than memoirs, but more subjective than biographies
- Broad in scope or timeline, often covering the author’s entire life up to the present
- Focused more on facts than emotions
- Requires more extensive fact-checking and research than memoirs, but less than biographies
- More formal and objective than memoirs, but more subjective than biographies
- Broad in scope or timeline, often covering the author’s entire life up to the present
- Focused more on facts than emotions
- Requires more extensive fact-checking and research than memoirs, but less than biographies
Biography
A biography is the story of events and
circumstances of a person’s life, written by someone other than that person.
Usually, people write biographies about a historical or public
figure. They can be written with or without the subject’s authorization.
Since the author is telling the account of
someone else, biographies are always in third person point of view and carry a
more formal and objective tone than both memoirs and autobiographies.
Like an autobiography, biographies cover the
entire scope of the subject’s life, so it should include details about his or
her birthplace, educational background, work history, relationships, death and
more.
Good biographers will research and study a
person’s life to collect facts and present the most historically accurate,
multi-faceted picture of an individual’s experiences as possible. A biography
should include intricate details—so in-depth research is necessary to ensure
accuracy.
“If you’re dealing principally with historical
figures who are long dead, there are very few legal problems…if you’re dealing
with a more sensitive issue…then the lawyers will be crawling all over the
story.” – David Margolick in Legal Issues with Biographies
However, biographies are still considered
creative nonfiction, so the author has the ability to analyze and interpret
events in the subject’s life, looking for meaning in their actions, uncovering
mistakes, solving mysteries, connecting details, and highlighting the
significance of the person's accomplishments or life activities.
Authors often organize events in chronological
order, but can sometimes organize by themes or specific accomplishments or
topics, depending on their book’s key idea.
Examples of popular biographies include Steve
Jobs by Walter Isaacson and The Immortal Life of Henrietta
Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.
Key traits of a biography:
- Written about another person,
often a celebrity or public figure, and told in 3rd person
point of view
- More formal and objective than both memoirs and autobiographies
- Broad in scope or timeline, often covering the subject’s entire life up to the present
- Focused solely on facts
- Requires meticulous research and fact-checking to ensure accuracy
- More formal and objective than both memoirs and autobiographies
- Broad in scope or timeline, often covering the subject’s entire life up to the present
- Focused solely on facts
- Requires meticulous research and fact-checking to ensure accuracy
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