15 Memoirs and Biographies to Read This Fall
New autobiographies from Jemele Hill, Matthew Perry and Hua Hsu are in the mix, along with books about Martha Graham, Agatha Christie and more.
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By John Williams , Joumana Khatib , Elizabeth A. Harris and Alexandra Alter
- Published Sept. 8, 2022 Updated Sept. 15, 2022
Solito: A Memoir , by Javier Zamora
When he was 9, Zamora left El Salvador to join his parents in the United States — a dangerous trek in the company of strangers that lasted for more than two months, a far cry from the two-week adventure he had envisioned. Zamora, a poet, captures his childhood impressions of the journey, including his fierce, lifesaving attachments to the other people undertaking the trip with him.
Hogarth, Sept. 6
A Visible Man: A Memoir , by Edward Enninful
The first Black editor in chief of British Vogue reflects on his life, including his early years as a gay, working-class immigrant from Ghana, and his path to becoming one of the most influential tastemakers in media.
Penguin Press, Sept. 6
Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman , by Lucy Worsley
Not many authors sell a billion books, but Christie’s nearly 70 mysteries helped her do just that. Born in 1890, she introduced the world to two detectives still going strong in film adaptations and elsewhere: Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. Her life even included its own mystery, when she vanished for 11 days in 1926 . Worsley, a historian, offers a full-dress biography.
Pegasus Crime, Sept. 8
Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands , by Kate Beaton
This graphic memoir follows Beaton, a Canadian cartoonist, who joins the oil rush in Alberta after graduating from college. The book includes drawings of enormous machines built to work the oil sands against a backdrop of Albertan landscapes, boreal forests and northern lights.
Drawn and Quarterly, Sept. 13
Like a Rolling Stone: A Memoir , by Jann S. Wenner
In 2017, Joe Hagan published “Sticky Fingers,” a biography of Wenner, the co-founder of Rolling Stone magazine. Now Wenner recounts his life in his own words, offering an intimate look at his time running the magazine that helped to change American culture.
Little, Brown, Sept. 13
Stay True: A Memoir , by Hua Hsu
A New Yorker staff writer reflects on a life-changing college friendship cut short by tragedy. Hsu — interested in counterculture, zines and above all music — seemed to have little in common with Ken, a Dave Matthews Band-loving fraternity brother, with the exception of their Asian American heritage. In spite of their differences, they forged a close bond; this is both a memoir of their relationship but also Hsu’s journey to adulthood as he makes sense of his grief.
Doubleday, Sept. 27
Wild: The Life of Peter Beard: Photographer, Adventurer, Lover , by Graham Boynton
A biography of the photographer Peter Beard, who had a fondness for risk, drugs and beautiful women. Boynton, a journalist and author, was a friend of Beard’s for more than 30 years.
St. Martin’s, Oct. 11
The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man: A Memoir , by Paul Newman
When Newman and his iconic blue eyes died in 2008, the actor left behind taped conversations about his life, which he had put together with hopes of writing his life story. Now, with the participation of Newman’s daughters, the transcripts have been turned into this book, which sees Newman on his early life, his troubles with drinking and his shortcomings as a husband and parent, as well as his decorated career.
Knopf. Oct. 18
Madly, Deeply: The Diaries of Alan Rickman
Rickman, the English stage and screen actor who died in 2016, was famous for his roles in “Die Hard,” the Harry Potter movies, “Love Actually” and many other films. He kept a diary for 25 years, about his work, his political activism, his friendships and other subjects, and they promise to be “anecdotal, indiscreet, witty, gossipy and utterly candid.”
Henry Holt, Oct. 18
README.txt: A Memoir , by Chelsea Manning
Manning, a former Army analyst, shared classified documents about the U.S. military’s operations in Iraq with WikiLeaks. In this memoir, she explores her childhood and what drew her to the armed services, her eventual disillusionment with the military and her life as a trans woman.
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Oct. 18
The White Mosque: A Memoir , by Sofia Samatar
Samatar, a novelist, turns to nonfiction in this complex work combining religious and personal history. Raised in the United States, the daughter of a Swiss-Mennonite and a Somali-Muslim, Samatar recounts her life while relating a pilgrimage she undertook retracing the route of German-speaking Mennonites who founded a village in Central Asia in the 1800s.
Catapult, Oct. 25
Martha Graham: When Dance Became Modern , by Neil Baldwin
The biographer Baldwin’s eclectic list of subjects has included William Carlos Williams, Man Ray, Thomas Edison and Henry Ford. Here he turns his attention to Martha Graham, the American choreographer who revolutionized modern dance and founded her own company, which is still going strong, in 1926.
Knopf, Oct. 25
Uphill: A Memoir , by Jemele Hill
Hill, now a contributing writer at The Atlantic, rose to fame as a TV anchor on ESPN. Her memoir covers the time in 2017 when ESPN suspended her (she had criticized the politics of the Dallas Cowboys’ owner, Jerry Jones, and had called President Trump a white supremacist). But the book offers a much broader canvas that includes her upbringing in Detroit and the trauma of generations of women in her family.
Henry Holt, Oct. 25
Friends, Lovers and the Terrible Thing: A Memoir , by Matthew Perry
Perry, who played Chandler Bing on “Friends,” has been candid about his substance abuse and sobriety. In this memoir, he returns again to discussions of fame and addiction, but also reaches back to his childhood.
Flatiron, Nov. 1
I Want to Die, but I Want to Eat Tteokbokki: A Memoir , by Baek Sehee. Translated by Anton Hur.
A best seller in South Korea, Baek’s memoir recounts her struggles with depression and anxiety, told through discussions with her therapist, which she recorded over a 12-week period. The therapy sessions are interspersed with short essays that explore her self-doubt and how feelings of worthlessness were reinforced by sexism.
Bloomsbury, Nov. 1
Elizabeth A. Harris writes about books and publishing for The Times. More about Elizabeth A. Harris
Alexandra Alter writes about publishing and the literary world. Before joining The Times in 2014, she covered books and culture for The Wall Street Journal. Prior to that, she reported on religion, and the occasional hurricane, for The Miami Herald. More about Alexandra Alter
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24 best autobiographies you have to read in 2024
Whether you're a long-time lover of non-fiction or you're new to the world of autobiographies, this is our list of the 24 best autobiographies you've got to read in 2024.
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Are you dreaming of a summer holiday? Perhaps you're fantasising of afternoons spent lying on the beach or by the pool — chilly January days just a mere memory... And there's nothing that says holiday quite like a new book.
Autobiographical writing is a skill that is hard to master. Done well, it can give you a behind the scenes peek into the world of your favourite star, or give you an insight into historical events and cultural context that would otherwise be near impossible to understand.
While books can make some of the best gifts for others they also can be a great gift for yourself — especially if you're looking to take a break from the screens that surround us in modern life. We love the experience of going into a bookshop, looking at all the covers and picking out a few new titles. But life can get busy, and it can be tricky to find the time to continue to support your local bookshop. Shopping from a site like Bookshop.org also lets you support independent bookshops from home.
Having said that, reading a physical book isn't the only way to enjoy these amazing stories.
Getting a Kindle can be a great way to carry lots of books round with you if you're travelling, and you can often download books for a much lower cost. Listening to audiobooks is also a great way to stay on top of your reading when you're on the go. Amazon Audible lets you download books onto your phone and listen as you go, and it's also running a 30-day UK free trial right now.
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Here's our list of the best autobiographies that you should read in your lifetime.
Looking for better ways to experience your favourite audiobook? Check out guides to the best wireless earbuds , best AirPod alternatives , and the best smart speakers . For more on audio, take a look at the best DAB radios .
Best autobiographies at a glance:
- Open, Andre Agassi | £10.99
- Everything I Know About Love, Dolly Alderton | £10.99
- I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou | from £4.99
- Wild Swans, Jung Chang | from £4.49
- The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion | from £6.99
- The Princess Diarist, Carrie Fisher | £10.99
- The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank | from £9.49
- All Creatures Great and Small, James Herriot | from £9.49
- This is Going to Hurt, Adam Kay | from £5.99
- Long Walk to Freedom, Nelson Mandela | from £6.99
- I'm Glad My Mom Died, Jennette McCurdy | from £11.99
- Dreams From My Father, Barack Obama | £9.99
- Becoming, Michelle Obama | from £7.99
- Madly, Deeply: The Diaries of Alan Rickman, Alan Rickman | from £7.50
- Just Kids, Patti Smith | £12.34
- Wild, Cheryl Strayed | £8.99
- Taste, Stanley Tucci | from £1.99
- Educated, Tara Westover | £10.99
- I Am Malala, Malala Yousafzai | from £8.54
- Crying In H Mart, Michelle Zauner | £9.99
- Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing, Matthew Perry | £20.99
- The Woman in Me, Britney Spears | £12.50
- Love, Pamela, Pamela Anderson | from £10.99
- Finding Me, Viola Davis | from £5.99
Best autobiographies to read in 2024
Open, andre agassi.
Written in 2009, this is the autobiography of the American former World No.1 tennis player, Andre Agassi. Written in collaboration with JR Moehringer from a collection of hundreds of hours of tapes, this memoir gives top insight into the life of a professional sportsperson.
Agassi's was a career of fierce rivalries and it's fascinating to hear these from the perspective of an insider. Like many high-performing careers, in sport children are singled out for their talent at a young age, and Agassi describes the intensity of training for himself and his fellow tennis players in their collective pursuit of excellence.
This book would make a great present for any tennis fan, and gives an interesting insight into the man behind the nickname 'The Punisher'.
Buy Open by Andre Agassi for £10.99 at Waterstones
Everything I Know About Love, Dolly Alderton
Everything I Know About Love follows Times columnist Dolly Alderton through her early life and 20s. It tackles themes of dating, love, friendship as Alderton comes of age and grows into herself. Dispersed with recipes in the style of Nora Ephron's Heartburn, the book gained a cult following since it was published in 2018 and won a National Book Award (UK) for best autobiography of the year.
Alderton's memoir has also now been turned into a BBC TV show which follows a fictionalised version of Alderton and her friends as they navigate life in London.
Buy Everything I Know About Love by Dolly Alderton for £10.99 at Foyles
I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou
I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings is the first of seven autobiographies Angelou wrote about her life. It follows her childhood, beginning when she's just three years old and spanning to when she is 16 — from her time as a child to when she had a child herself. The book follows the young Maya as she and her brother Bailey are moved between family members following the separation of her parents.
Discussing themes of racism, sexual assault and displacement, the expertly crafted narrative is widely taught in schools here and in the US. Written in the aftermath of the death of Martin Luther King Jr in 1968, I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings became an instant classic and is a must-read.
Buy I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou from £4.99 at Amazon
Wild Swans, Jung Chang
Slightly different from traditional first person autobiographies, in this book Jung Chang tells the stories of three generations of women in her own family — her grandmother, her mother and herself. At a time when China is becoming increasingly isolated from the rest of the world, this book provides vital context into the 20th century history of the country.
Through the stories of her grandmother who was given to a warlord as a concubine, and her mother who was a young idealist during the rise of Communism, she captures moments of bravery, fear, and ultimately survival.
The book, which is banned in China, has sold more than 13 million copies worldwide and is as beautifully written as it is educationally fascinating.
Buy Wild Swans by Jung Chang from £4.49 at Amazon
The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion
Published in 2005 when it went on to win Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography, this book follows Didion in the year after her the death of her husband of nearly 40 years, John Gregory Dunne. In this harrowing depiction of grief, love and loss, Didion turns her personal experience into one that is universally relatable.
Didion and Donne's adopted daughter Quintana fell ill days before his death and was still in hospital when he died. Didion recounts her experience caring for her throughout the book, all while going through her own grief.
While not an easy read, this is an incredibly powerful one.
Buy The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion from £6.99 at Amazon
The Princess Diarist, Carrie Fisher
This might be an obvious choice for any Star Wars fan, but we think the appeal of this book stretches far beyond just that. Made up of the diaries Fisher wrote when she was 19 years old and first started playing Princess Leia, the book was released shortly before her death in 2016.
Any peak behind the scenes of such a well-known franchise is bound to be popular, and this examines her experience as a young adult thrust into the world of fame and sex. Unlike her deeply person earlier memoir Wishful Drinking, in which Fisher described her struggles with mental illness, The Princess Diarist is full of bombshell revelations and funny punchlines, making for an enjoyable read.
Buy The Princess Diarist by Carrie Fisher for £10.99 at Foyles
The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank
The title of this book is clever because in so many ways, Anne Frank's diary is just that — the diary of a young girl. But it is also a vital account of history.
Starting on her 13th birthday, Anne writes about her life with her family living in Amsterdam from 1942 to 1944. Alongside other Jews, Anne and her family go into hiding to escape persecution from the Nazis. She deals with all the feeling teenagers experience growing up, but also grapples with her isolation, lack of freedom, and trying to understand what is happening in the world around her.
Important reading for young people and adults alike, Anne's writing brings home the realities of human suffering levelled upon the Jewish people by the Nazis. Anne's father Otto Frank was the only member of her family to survive the Holocaust, and he published his daughter's diary in line with her wishes.
Buy The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank from £9.49 at Bookshop.org
All Creatures Great and Small, James Herriot
This book would make a great gift for the animal lover in your life, or any fan of the great outdoors. In it, James Herriot recounts his experiences as a newly qualified vet working in the Yorkshire Dales in the 1930s.
The first in his series of memoirs, All Creatures Great and Small finds Herriot in situations where there are high stakes, and more often than not some hilarity (think escaped pigs!). In the years since their first publication, the books have become classics.
If you want more of All Creatures Great and Small, there is also a TV adaptation to get stuck into.
Buy All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot from £8.54 at Bookshop.org
This is Going to Hurt, Adam Kay
This autobiography follows Adam Kay through his years as a junior doctor specialising in obstetrics and gynaecology and working within the NHS. It will have you crying of laughter and sorrow as the young doctor finds himself helping people from all walks of life, all while his own personal life falls into disarray.
Kay's debut publication was the bestselling non-fiction title of 2018 in the UK and stayed at the top of the charts for weeks.
This is Going to Hurt was adapted into a limited drama series by the BBC earlier this year starring Ben Whishaw, which used elements of the book to explore wider themes around health and the NHS.
Buy This is Going to Hurt by Adam Kay from £5.99 at Amazon
Long Walk to Freedom, Nelson Mandela
This autobiography hardly needs an introduction. It tells the life story of former South African President and antiapartheid revolutionary Nelson Mandela, covering his childhood, education and the 27 years he spent in prison.
Mandela is internationally praised for overcoming enormous persecution and struggle, rebuilding South Africa's society as President. The film adaptation of his autobiography stars Idris Elba as Mandela, and was released shortly after his death.
The Kindle edition and paperback copy of this book starts from just £6.99.
Buy Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela from 99p at Amazon
I'm Glad My Mom Died, Jennette McCurdy
Jennette McCurdy's memoir has been one of the most talked about books of 2022. A former child star best know for her role on Nickelodeon's iCarly in the USA, McCurdy's memoir describes her experience growing up in the limelight with an abusive parent.
The book's title has, unsurprisingly, been a big talking point, but it addresses an issue faced by many who write about their life experiences — how do you write about your true experience without damaging your relationships? In this frank and often funny book, McCurdy describes the emotional complexity of receiving abuse from someone you love.
Buy I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy from £11.99 at Amazon
Dreams From My Father, Barack Obama
Published nearly 15 years before he became President of the United States, Barack Obama's first memoir is a deep exploration into identity and belonging. In this book which begins with him learning about his father's death, Obama explores his own relationship with race as the son of a Black Kenyan father and a white American mother.
Written with his recognisable voice, Obama travels back to Kansas where his mother's family is from (they later moved to Hawaii where Obama spent most of his childhood) before making the journey to Kenya.
This makes an interesting read not only to learn more about the background of a man who holds such an important place in America's history, but also in shedding light on how we all relate to our own parentage and what makes us who we are.
Buy Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama for £9.99 at Waterstones
Becoming, Michelle Obama
America's former First Lady Michelle Obama recounts experiences of her life in this record breaking autobiography, from growing up on the south side of Chicago with her parents and brother, to attending Princeton University and Harvard Law School before returning to Chicago as a qualified lawyer. It was whilst working at a law firm in the city that she met her husband Barack Obama.
Obama uses her elegant story telling to take us along on the incredible journey she went on, as an accomplished lawyer, daughter, wife and mother to becoming First Lady. This is an autobiography that lets you see history from the insider's perspective and is definitely a must read.
Buy Becoming by Michelle Obama from £7.99 at Amazon
Madly, Deeply: The Diaries of Alan Rickman, Alan Rickman
Alan Rickman was much loved for his roles in fan favourite films, such as Hans Gruber in Die Hard and Professor Severus Snape in the Harry Potter series. This collection of diary entries, written with the intention of being made public and published after his death, give his witty insights into his day-to-day life but also his take on world events.
The book is filled not only with delightful showbiz gossip, but also with snippets of hidden moments — from his disbelief and grief at the sudden death of actor and friend Natasha Richardson, to the relief he feels that the costume for Severus Snape still fits.
Buy Madly, Deeply: The Diaries of Alan Rickman by Alan Rickman from £7.79 at Amazon
Just Kids, Patti Smith
On its release in 2010, Patti Smith's memoir won the US National Book Award for Nonfiction. In many ways it is a love letter to her life long friend, the artist Robert Mapplethorpe. In Just Kids, she recounts their meeting, romance and how they continued to inspire and encourage each other in their artistic pursuits for the rest of their lives.
This story which so vividly depicts life is, however, overshadowed by Mapplethorpe's death. Read for a vivid description of the New York art scene in the late '60s.
Buy Just Kids by Patti Smith for £12.34 at Bookshop.org
Wild, Cheryl Strayed
In this autobiography, Cheryl Strayed writes about hiking the Pacific Coast Trail, from the Mojave Desert in California to Washington State in the Pacific North West. In total, Strayed walks over a thousand miles on her own and in the process, she walked back to herself.
This memoir is beautifully written, moving between stories from the trail to those about Strayed's childhood, her struggles with heroin use and the sudden death of her mother — the main motivation for her walk. Full of suspense, warmth and humour, this book will make you think about your life and your family, and probably make you want to go on a walk.
Wild was adapted into a film in 2014, produced by and starring Reese Witherspoon.
Buy Wild by Cheryl Strayed for £8.99 at Waterstones
Taste, Stanley Tucci
Stanley Tucci has long been beloved for his nuanced and charming acting performances, but in the last few years has gained popularity for his true love — food. Between his CNN series Searching for Italy making us all cross eyed with food envy, and his cookbook The Tucci Table written with wife Felicity Blunt, there's no getting away from the fact that Stanley Tucci is giving Italian food an even better name than it had already.
But there's a good reason for Tucci's renewed love of food and his devotion to these passion projects. He was diagnosed with oral cancer in 2018 which left him unable to eat for several months, and even after he was able to eat again, his sense of taste was changed. In this memoir, he recounts his early relationship with food in his grandparent's kitchen and at his parent's table, and how his relationship with food has shaped all the loves of his life.
We recommend having a bowl of pasta in front of you while you read this!
Buy Taste by Stanley Tucci from £6.99 at Amazon
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Educated, Tara Westover
This is a frankly astonishing memoir in which Tara Westover recounts how she came from a Mormon fundamentalist background without a birth certificate or any schooling, and ended up studying for her PhD at the University of Cambridge.
Westover gives readers a peak behind the curtain into the lifestyle of a group who do everything they can to stay away from the outside world. She recounts the experience of herself and her siblings as they grew up in an environment where they were often injured and didn't have access to medical help.
The juxtaposition of loving her family and yet needing to escape is acutely described, and she writes so cleverly about the complex subject matter, often admitting that her version of events may not be the correct one. Westover expertly uses her own story to examine themes of religion, love and above all education - and we promise you won't be able to put it down.
Buy Educated by Tara Westover for £10.99 at Foyles
I Am Malala, Malala Yousafzai
Malala Yousafzai's story is undeniably an incredible one. After the Taliban took over in Swat Valley in Pakistan where she was born, Yousafzai was prevented from going to school. Despite being just a child herself, she became outspoken on girls' right to learn and in 2012, she was shot in the head by a masked gunman while on the bus to school.
After the attack Yousafzai moved to the UK with her family. In this autobiography, she describes the importance of female education, starting the Malala Fund, and receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014. This book will leave you inspired.
Buy I Am Malala by Malala Yousafzai from £8.54 at Bookshop.org
Crying In H Mart, Michelle Zauner
Michelle Zauner is an Asian-American singer-songwriter and guitarist best known as lead of the band Japanese Breakfast. In this memoir, Zauner explores her relationship with her Korean heritage and how her mother's death forced her to reckon with the side of herself she had all but lost.
At the heart of this book about love, loss and grief is food. It acts as a constant dialogue between Zauner and her mother, as well as an enduring connection with her Korean heritage. This makes for a highly emotional and thought-provoking read.
Buy Crying In H Mart by Michelle Zauner for £9.99 at Waterstones
Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing, Matthew Perry
Last year, we were saddened by the news that Friends actor Matthew Perry had sadly passed away, his autobiography, Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing had become a bestseller the year before.
In Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing, Perry takes the reader behind the scenes of the most successful sitcom of all time (Friends), and he opens up about his private struggles with addiction. The book is honest and moving, with plenty of Perry's trademark humour, too.
Buy Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing by Matthew Perry for £20.99 at Waterstones
The Woman in Me, Britney Spears
If the reviews of Britney Spears's autobiography are anything to go by — "The easiest 5 stars I've given" — The Woman in Me is sure to be a hit with Spears fans.
For the first time in a book, Spears is sharing her truth with the world: The Woman in Me tackles themes of fame, motherhood, survival and freedom, and Spears doesn't shy away from speaking about her journey as one of the world's biggest pop stars.
Buy The Woman in Me by Britney Spears for £12.50 at Waterstones
Love, Pamela, Pamela Anderson
We might think we know Pamela Anderson as the bombshell in Baywatch, Playboy's favourite cover girl, and, more recently, making makeup-free appearances on red carpets – looking beautiful as she does so; she's an icon and an activist, and now we can read all about her in her own words for the first time.
Anderson uses a mixture of poetry and prose to speak about her childhood, career, and how she lost control of her own narrative.
Buy Love, Pamela by Pamela Anderson from £10.99 at Amazon
Finding Me, Viola Davis
Naturally, we're big Viola Davis fans over on RadioTimes.com — we've loved her in everything from The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes to The Woman King and The Help, so her autobiography Finding Me is right up our street.
In this book, we meet Davis when she's a little girl in an apartment in Central Falls, Rhode Island, and we journey with her to her stage career in New York City and beyond.
Buy Finding Me by Viola Davis from £5.99 at Amazon
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The Best Memoirs of 2023
These ten books explore what it means to be a person..
The beauty of memoir is its resistance to confinement: We contain multitudes, so our methods of introspection must, too. This year’s best memoirs perfectly showcase such variety. Some are sparse, slippery — whole lives pieced together through fragmented memories, letters to loved ones, recipes, mythology, scripture. Some tease the boundary between truth and fiction. Others elevate straightforward narratives by incorporating political theory, philosophy, and history. The authors of each understand that one’s life — and more significantly, one’s self — can’t be contained in facts. After all, the facts as we remember them aren’t really facts. It’s their openness and experimentation that allow, at once, intimacy and universality, provoking some of our biggest questions: How does a person become who they are? What makes up an identity? What are the stories we tell ourselves, and why do they matter? These books might not spell out the answers for you, but they’ll certainly push you toward them.
10. Hijab Butch Blues , by Lamya H
NYC-based organizer Lamya H (a pseudonym) has described her memoir as “unapologetically queer and unapologetically Muslim .” What this looks like is a book that isn’t so much grappling with or reconciling two conflicting identities, but rather lovingly examining the ways each has supported and strengthened the other. Lamya provides close, queer readings of the Quran, drawing connections between its stories and her own experiences of persecution as a brown girl growing up in an (unnamed) Arab country with strict colorist hierarchies. Beginning with her study of the prophet Maryam — whose virgin pregnancy and general rejection of men brings a confused 14-year-old Lamya real relief during Quran class — Lamya draws on various religious figures to track her political, spiritual, and sexual coming of age, jumping back and forth in time as she grows from a struggling child into a vital artist and activist.
9. Better Living Through Birding , by Christian Cooper
On May 25, 2020, birder Christian Cooper was walking the Central Park Ramble when he asked a white woman on the same path to leash her dog. She refused, he started recording, and after both he and his sister posted the video on social media , the whole world saw her call 911 and falsely claim that an African American man was threatening both her and her dog. Cooper quickly found himself at the center of an urgent conversation about weaponized whiteness and police brutality against Black men in the U.S., amplified by another devastating video circulating that same day: George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police. Many will pick up Cooper’s memoir for his account of the interaction that captured international attention and forever changed his life — and it is a powerful, damning examination — but it is far from the main event. By the time it shows up, Cooper has already given us poignant recollections of growing up Black and gay (and in the closet) in 1970s Long Island, a loving analysis of science fiction, a behind-the-scenes look at the comic-book industry as it broke through to the mainstream, and most significantly, an impassioned ode to and accessible education on recreational birding. (The audiobook comes with interstitial birdsong!) Recalling his time at Harvard, Cooper turns repeatedly to his love of his English classes, and this background comes through in his masterful writing. An already prolific writer in the comic-book space, his memoir marks his first (and hopefully not last) foray into the long-form territory.
8. Love and Sex, Death and Money , by McKenzie Wark
McKenzie Wark is one of the sharpest, most exciting voices writing at the intersections of capitalism, community, gender, and sex — more broadly, everything in this title — and she is also criminally underread. In her epistolary memoir Love and Sex … , she looks at a lifetime of transitions — journeys not only through her gender, but also politics, art, relationships, and aging — and reflects on all the ways she has become the woman she is today, in letters to the people who helped shape her. Wark’s first letter is, fittingly, directed to her younger self. She acknowledges their infinite possible futures and that, in this way, this younger Wark on the brink of independence is the one most responsible for setting her on the path to this specific future. In theory, it’s a letter to offer clarity, even guidance, to this younger self, but really it’s a means of listening to and learning from her. Her letters to mothers, lovers, and others are as much, if not more, about Wark as they are about the recipients, but that self-reflection doubles as a testament to the recipients’ power. What comes across most strongly is Wark’s belief in ongoing evolution and education, and it’s hard not to leave inspired by that possibility.
7. A Man of Two Faces , by Viet Thanh Nguyen
Pulitzer Prize winner Viet Thanh Nguyen’s memoir maintains the singular voice of his fiction: audacious, poetic, self-aware. Written in nonlinear second-person stream of consciousness — its disjointedness represented on the page by paragraphs volleying from left to right alignment across the page — A Man of Two Faces recounts his life as a Vietnamese refugee in the U.S. When his family moves from wartime Vietnam to San Jose, California, 4-year-old Nguyen is placed in a different sponsor home than the rest of his family. The separation is brief, but it sets a tone of alienation that continues throughout his life — both from his parents, who left their home in pursuit of safety but landed in a place with its own brand of violence, and from his new home. As he describes his journey into adulthood and academia, Nguyen incorporates literary and cultural criticism, penetrating analyses of political history and propaganda, and poignant insights about memory and trauma.
6. Sure, I’ll Join Your Cult: A Memoir of Mental Illness and the Quest to Belong Anywhere , by Maria Bamford
It’s safe to say alt-comedian Maria Bamford’s voice isn’t for everyone. Those who get her anti-stand-up stand-up get it and those who don’t, don’t. Her absurdist, meta series Lady Dynamite revealed the work of a woman learning to recognize and love her brilliant weirdness, and in Sure, I’ll Join Your Cult , she channels that weirdness into a disarmingly earnest, more accessible account of both fame and mental illness. Centered on Bamford’s desperate pursuit of belonging, and the many, often questionable places it’s led her — church, the comedy scene, self-actualization conferences, 12-step groups, each of which she puts under the umbrella of the titular “cults” — Sure, I’ll Join Your Cult is egoless, eye-opening, uncomfortable, and laugh-out-loud funny. These are among the best qualities — maybe even prerequisites — of an effective mental-illness memoir, and Bamford’s has earned its keep in the top tier. If you’re thinking of skipping it because you haven’t connected with Bamford’s work before: don’t.
5. In Vitro: On Longing and Transformation , by Isabel Zapata
In Isabel Zapata’s intimate, entrancing memoir In Vitro , the Mexican poet brazenly breaks what she calls “the first rule of in vitro fertilization”: never talk about it. Originally published in Spanish in 2021, and with original drawings woven throughout, In Vitro is a slim collection of short, discrete pieces. Its fragments not only describe the invasive process and its effects on her mind and body, but also contextualize its lineage, locating the deep-seated draw of motherhood and conception, analyzing the inheritances of womanhood, and speaking directly to her potential child. All together, it becomes something expansive — an insightful personal history but also a brilliant philosophical text about the very nature of sacrifice and autonomy.
4. The Night Parade , by Jami Nakamura Lin
When Jami Nakamura Lin was 17 years old, she checked herself into a psych ward and was diagnosed bipolar. After years experiencing disorienting periods of rage, the diagnosis offers validation — especially for her historically dismissive parents — but it doesn’t provide the closure that mainstream depictions of mental illness promise. In The Night Parade , intriguingly categorized as a speculative memoir, Lin explains that if a story is good, it “collapses time”; in other words, it has no beginning or end. Chasing this idea, Lin turns to the stories of her Japanese, Taiwanese, and Okinawan heritage, using their demons, spirits, and monsters to challenge ideas of recovery and resituate her feelings of otherness. Intertwined in this pursuit is her grappling with the young death of her father and the birth of her daughter after a traumatic miscarriage. Extensively researched — citing not only folklore but also scholars of history, literary, and mythology — and elevated by her sister Cori Nakamura Lin’s lush illustrations, The Night Parade is both an entirely new perspective on bipolar disorder and a fascinating education in mythology by an expert who so clearly loves the material. It might be Lin’s first book, but it possesses the self-assurance, courage, and mastery of a seasoned writer.
3. Doppelganger , by Naomi Klein
After the onset of the COVID pandemic, as the U.S. devolved into frenzied factions, sociopolitical analyst Naomi Klein found herself in the middle of her own bewildering drama: A substantial population, especially online, began to either confuse or merge her with Naomi Wolf, a writer who’d gone from feminist intellectual to anti-vaxx conspiracy theorist. Klein’s initial bemusement becomes real concern verging on obsession as she fixates on her sort-of doppelgänger and starts questioning the stability of her identity. Klein becomes entangled in the world of her opposite, tracing the possible pipelines from leftism to alt-right and poking at the cracks in our convictions. Throughout, she nails the uncanniness of our digital existence, the ways constant performance of life both splinters and constrains the self. What happens when we sacrifice our humanity in the pursuit of a cohesive personal brand? And when we’re this far gone, is there any turning back?
2. The Woman in Me , by Britney Spears
Throughout the yearslong campaign to release Britney Spears from a predatory conservatorship , the lingering conspiracy theories questioning its success , and the ongoing cultural discourse about the ways public scrutiny has harmed her, what has largely been missing is Spears’s own voice. In her highly anticipated memoir, she lays it all out: her upbringing in a family grappling with multiple generations of abuse, the promise and betrayal of stardom, her exploitation and manipulation by loved ones, and the harrowing, dehumanizing realities of her conservatorship . These revelations are tempered by moments of genuine joy she’s found in love, motherhood, and singing, though it’s impossible to read these recollections without anticipating the loss — or at least the complication — of these joys. Most touching are her descriptions of her relationships with her sons; her tone is conversational, but it resonates with deep, undying devotion. It’s an intimate story, and one that forces questions about our treatment of mental illness, the ethics of psychiatric practices, the relationships between public figures and their fans, and the effects of fame — especially on young women. Justice for Britney, forever.
1. Pulling the Chariot of the Sun , by Shane McCrae
When Shane McCrae was 3 years old, his white maternal grandparents told his Black father they were taking Shane on a camping trip. It wasn’t the first time they’d done so, but this time, they never returned. What followed was a life full of instability, abuse, and manipulation, while his grandparents — including a grandfather who had, more than once, trawled cities for Black men to attack — convinced McCrae his father had abandoned him and that his Blackness was a handicap. It’s clear McCrae is first and foremost a poet; the rhythm of his prose and his hypnotic evocation of sensory memory reveals the way a lifetime of lies affected his grasp on his past. Maybe he can’t trust the facts of his past, but he certainly knows what it felt like, what it looked like. As he excavates and untangles muddied memories, contends with ambivalent feelings about his grandmother and mother, and ultimately comes to terms with their unforgivable robbery of a relationship with both his father and his true, full self, McCrae’s pain bleeds through his words — but so too does a gentle sense of acceptance. We are lucky to bear witness.
- vulture section lede
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- year in culture
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The best autobiographies to read in 2023
- Nik Rawlinson
Discover the back stories of some of the best-known names in showbiz and politics, in their own words
Read an autobiography, and you’ll feel closer to the subject than you’d ever get in real life. They might not reveal their deepest, darkest secrets, but they will usually wind back the clock and walk you through their childhood and early years, so you can see how they became the person they are today.
The raciest autobiographies are frequently indiscreet, the most engaging may name-drop with wild abandon, and the best stand on the quality of their writing, regardless of the subject matter. Some are ghost-written, granted, but so long as the voice sounds authentic and the contents are true, does that matter?
Here, we’ve picked out six of the best autobiographies you can buy today. Most were published in the past couple of years, although one is considerably older and was re-released in 2018, several decades after it was first published. We’ve included it because of the quality of the writing and the compelling story it tells.
Before that, though, if you’re struggling to choose between them – or any of the dozens of other autobiographies published every year – check out our tips for choosing the best autobiography for you.
READ NEXT: Get organised with the best diaries, planners and personal organisers
Best autobiographies: At a glance
- Best showbiz autobiography: One of them by Michael Cashman | £9.19
- Best political autobiography: Free by Lea Ypi | £6.99
- Best autobiography for the 90s TV generation: Gotta Get Theroux This by Louis Theroux | £6.99
How to choose the best autobiography for you
They say everyone has at least one story in them. Perhaps that’s why there are so many autobiographies to choose from. The trick is to pick one that appeals to you, and keeps your attention from the first page to the last.
Look for something unfamiliar
The most engrossing book is often one that immerses you in an entirely unknown world, yet evokes it so clearly that the images are vivid and all-encompassing. For most readers, Trevor Noah’s Born a Crime and Lea Ypi’s Free, each of which features in our selection, fall into these categories. They take the reader into a realm that most will (thankfully) never have experienced. And, in doing so, they demonstrate that a return to those places, times and attitudes is something we must avoid.
Uncover the other side of a story
The biggest-selling autobiographies are those written by the most recognisable names in show business, sport, politics and music, and most of the readers who pick them up are hoping they’ll tell the stories behind the headlines. Gotta Get Theroux This, by Louis Theroux, delivers here, examining not only how Theroux himself came to prominence, but the back stories – and occasional fall-out – of some of his most high-profile encounters. Elton John’s Me is an incredibly honest and revealing chronicle of his life, while Tom Allen’s No Shame is a candid tale of growing up gay in the suburbs – a world away from the glamour of primetime TV.
Don’t forget the audiobook option
Where an autobiography has been written by an actor or other public performer, it’s not uncommon for them to also narrate the audiobook. This is true of Adam Buxton with Ramble Book, Michael Cashman with One of Them, Miriam Margolyes with This Much is True , and Stephen Fry with his various volumes of autobiography, including The Fry Chronicles , More Fool Me and Moab Is My Washpot . Hearing the author’s words in their own voice brings another dimension to the work, and lets you take them with you wherever you’re going, whatever you’re doing.
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1. One of Them by Michael Cashman: Best showbiz autobiography
Price: £9.19 | Buy now from Amazon
Michael Cashman will be remembered by many as Albert Square’s yuppie graphic designer, Colin. But his time in EastEnders is just a small, if very visible, episode in a varied, high-profile career that took him from the back streets of London’s East End to the benches of the House of Lords. Indeed, performing is, in many ways, a mere side act: this is a book in which, at least in the second half, politics takes centre stage.
Cashman grew up in what could well have been EastEnders’ back yard (if it hadn’t actually been filmed in west London), but his childhood, in which untrustworthy and exploitative strangers loom large, would likely have been too extreme for the soap’s scriptwriters to contemplate. He was perfectly cast, then, as a truly mould-breaking character at a time when gay relationships were rarely portrayed as being equal to their straight equivalents on mainstream TV.
After close to 200 episodes, he left to pursue other interests, and eventually found himself elected to the European Parliament, representing the seat of West Midlands. He was a spokesperson on human rights and, before his time in Brussels drew to a close in 2014, he’d been awarded a CBE for public and political service. Returning to Britain wasn’t the end of his political career, nor of his campaigning, and he took his seat in the House of Lords as a life peer.
From humble beginnings, Cashman has reached great heights in both show business and politics, despite facing significant challenges. There are some shocking episodes in his autobiography, but perhaps none is so heartbreaking as that with which it draws to a close.
Key details – Length: 432 pages; Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing; ISBN: 978-1526612366
One of Them: From Albert Square to Parliament Square
2. free: coming of age at the end of history by lea ypi: best political autobiography.
Lea Ypi is professor of political theory at the London School of Economics, but she grew up in Albania during the years of communist rule. Her grandfather had been prime minister for just over a year in the early 1920s, and was assassinated in December 1940. Those facts – and the detrimental impact the family’s association with the former prime minister would have – were kept from her during her childhood.
To a degree, it’s kept from the reader, too. The book is cleverly structured, with the first part covering Ypi’s life under socialism, and the second venturing into the years of the free market economy and the country’s transition to capitalism. Thus, as Ypi grows and learns, so do we. Through her narrative, we overhear relatives talk of family members who have gone away to “university”, always wondering whether there isn’t more to their back story. Inevitably, there is. This is a curious biography, then – one in which the reader grows with the narrator, and learns through her own experience. Yet there’s no naivete in her description of those early years, and no raised eyebrows or nudge to the reader who, reading from the future, knows better than she did herself.
Neither is there any romanticising of life on either side of that political transition. “Five years after the fall of socialism, episodes of our life back then had become part of the repertoire of amusing family anecdotes,” Ypi writes. “It didn’t matter if the memories were absurd, hilarious or painful, or all of these at once. We would joke about them over meals, like drunken sailors who had survived a shipwreck and relisted showing one another the scars.”
Key details – Length: 336 pages; Publisher: Penguin; ISBN: 978-0141995106
Free: Coming of Age at the End of History
3. gotta get theroux this by louis theroux: best autobiography for the 90s tv generation.
Louis Theroux is best known for his calm, persistent profiling of rich, famous or unusual characters. Here, he turns that focus on himself as he recounts a career that, from the outside, he seems almost to have fallen into. On the subject of landing his own series off the back of work on TV Nation, Theorux writes that “from a state of directionless obscurity I had been vaulted into a realm of possibility I hadn’t ever dared imagine. And one part of me saw it this way. But another, greater part was dubious, suspecting that the transformation was not wholly earned and therefore not really mine.”
Earned or not, Theroux has more than proved his right to grace our screens in the years since, through a series of groundbreaking documentaries exploring, and sometimes exposing, the less often represented.
Born in Singapore to travel writer Paul and BBC arts producer Anne, he grew up in London, then went to boarding school, spent summers on Cape Cod, and later moved to the US under his own steam as his journalistic career took off. First came newspapers, then television. “For a year and a half, up the Amazon in a rocket motorboat, in the revolutionary hills of Mexican Chiapas, among religious crazies in Jerusalem and good old boys in the backroads of the Deep South, and occasionally amid the almost-as-alien milieu of a well-funded workplace with ambitions to change American television and society, I worked at TV Nation. But it was all a salutary apprenticeship – I was learning, without realising it, skills and techniques that I would rely on throughout the course of my TV career.”
Many of his career highs are well known, but here their background and aftermath are explored in detail. He looks back on his encounter with Jimmy Savile, the resulting broadcast, and the investigation that followed Savile’s death, at which Theroux was called to speak. And he describes the fall-out from an ill-advised tweet, and how it made him feel (“my lawyer advised me to instruct a high-powered QC… I would brood about my own stupidity at sending the tweet and the likelihood of its having catastrophic consequences… I wondered inwardly whether I’d be remortgaging the house, and should I just apologise, or did that, as the lawyers claimed, lay me open to massive damages…”).
It’s easy to imagine that investigative presenters like Theroux simply swoop in, do their jobs and move on to the next subject, the next programme or the next big thing with barely a thought for the one they’re leaving behind. This autobiography proves that not to be the case at all. Not only are there real people behind the stories; there are real people presenting them, too.
Key details – Length: 416 pages; Publisher: Pan; ISBN: 978-1509880393
Gotta Get Theroux This: My life and strange times in television
4. ramble book by adam buxton: best autobiography for kids and teens of the 80s.
It wasn’t his first TV appearance, but Adam Buxton hit the big time in 1996, with Channel 4’s The Adam and Joe Show. Since then, he’s been a regular on BBC3, Xfm, the Edinburgh Festival, films and Eight out of Ten Cats Does Countdown’s dictionary corner. To many, he’ll be best known for his long-running podcast, with a simple formula – an unhurried, rambling chat – that attracts guests of impressive calibre. You don’t need to scroll far through the archive to come across Joe Lycett, Robbie Williams, Zadie Smith, Derren Brown, David Sedaris, Michael Palin, Frank Skinner, and skaters Torvill and Dean. The mix is as eclectic as it is entertaining.
But it’s also not surprising that they feature. The aptly named Ramble Book is a roll-call of the great and the good, with whom Buxton’s diverse media career has brought him into contact. He was at school with documentary maker Louis Theroux – and the “Joe” of The Adam and Joe Show is their mutual friend, filmmaker Joe Cornish. Buxton’s father was the Sunday Telegraph travel editor, as a result of which Buxton junior visited such diverse destinations as Brabadon, China and “all over America” during his childhood.
Yet it’s not a showy book. It’s underpinned by a humbleness, frequently diverts into introspection or random thoughts, and finds Buxton in situations familiar to us all, like the times we’ve made fools of ourselves objecting to what we consider somebody else’s bad behaviour – and the discomfort we often feel afterwards.
There’s a humanity to Ramble Book, a familiarity, and a reminder that famous people are just like the rest of us – just a bit better known.
Key details – Length: 368 pages; Publisher: Mudlark; ISBN: 978-0008293338
Ramble Book: Musings on Childhood, Friendship, Family and 80s Pop Culture
5. conundrum by jan morris: best trans and gender dysphoria autobiography.
Jan Morris was born James Humphry Morris in Somerset in 1926, and died in Wales in 2020. She underwent gender reassignment surgery in 1972, after travelling to Morocco for the procedure. Two years later, she wrote Conundrum, in which she told the story of her transition. It was re-released in 2018.
Morris is best known as a travel writer, and that career took her to Everest with Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, to Fiji, to Suez during the crisis and, memorably, to Italy. Her work on Venice is of particular note. But Conundrum is something else entirely. It’s an internal journey – a journey home in many respects – that sets out its stall at the very beginning.
“I was three or perhaps four years old when I realised that I had been born into the wrong body, and should really be a girl,” she writes. “I remember the moment well, and it is the earliest memory of my life.” What follows is a highly evocative sentence, that hints at the beauty of the writing to come: “I was sitting beneath my mother’s piano, and her music was falling around me like cataracts, enclosing me as in a cave.”
Morris was far from alone in her conviction that she’d been born into the wrong body, but Britain was not a society in which she was free to undertake the necessary transition on her own terms and, “for forty years… a sexual purpose dominated, distracted and tormented my life: the tragic and irrational ambition, instinctively formulated but deliberately pursued, to escape from maleness into womanhood… each year my longing to live as a woman grew more urgent, as my male body seemed to grow harder around me”.
It’s impossible not to fall in love with Morris’ style. That her subject matter is one so rarely discussed makes this short autobiography all the more engaging.
Key details – Length: 160 pages; Publisher: Faber & Faber; ISBN: 978-0571341139
6. Born a Crime by Trevor Noah: Best race history autobiography
“I was nine years old when my mother threw me out of a moving car.” She was saving his life. Noah was born in apartheid South Africa, to a black mother and white father, at a time when inter-racial relationships were illegal. It was a world and a time “where violence was always lurking and waiting to erupt… Had I lived a different life, getting thrown out of a speeding minibus might have fazed me. I’d have stood there like an idiot… but there was none of that. Mom said ‘run’ and I ran. Like the gazelle runs from the lion, I ran.”
It’s a story that will thankfully be unfamiliar to a large part of its audience. For a white reader with no experience of the political system under which he came into the world, it’s difficult to comprehend Noah’s need to remain hidden and so often confined to the house. Apartheid came to an end when Noah was still a child, but even in the wake of that momentous event the fall out was unequal and extreme.
“What I do remember, what I will never forget,” he writes, “is the violence that followed. The triumph of democracy over apartheid is sometimes called the Bloodless Revolution. It is called that because very little white blood was spilled. Black blood ran in the streets.”
Today, as the host of The Daily Show, Noah has been named as one of the most powerful people in New York media. To have reached such heights after so difficult a start in life makes this story all the more remarkable.
For younger readers, there’s also a YA version of this book, at £8.17 .
Key details – Length: 304 pages; Publisher: John Murray; ISBN: 978-1473635302
Born A Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood
9 Captivating New Autobiographies and Memoirs
This season, curl up with an eye-opening new narrative.
A great autobiography or memoir speaks to the shared human experience as it captures the magic of a unique life story. Below is a diverse list of new autobiographies and memoirs that will open your eyes to fresh and memorable perspectives this fall.
By LaDoris Hazzard Cordell
As the first Black woman to sit on the Superior Court of Northern California, Judge LaDoris Hazzard Cordell has a unique outlook on American justice. She’s witnessed its flaws and biases, and yet she believes in the essential value of the system. In her newly released memoir , Judge Cordell invites you into her courtroom for a behind-the-scenes look at America’s legal process, exploring what works and what needs fixing, from juvenile law and jury selection to the intricate ways that judges make sentencing decisions. Cordell draws on real-life cases to craft her wise and provocative account, chronicling a lifetime of experience on the bench while highlighting the steps we can take to make our imperfect system more equitable for all Americans.
Fox & I
By catherine raven.
Catherine Raven’s celebrated new autobiographical account is a deeply personal meditation on friendship and the extraordinary beauty of our shared natural world. Her narrative chronicles the time she spent living alone in a tiny cottage in Montana and the unlikely friendship she developed with one surprising visitor: a fox. At the time, Raven had just completed her Ph.D. in biology and was leading field classes at nearby Yellowstone National Park while she applied for full-time work. Life at the cottage was emotionally and physically isolating, until a mangy fox began appearing on her property every afternoon. As Raven’s interspecies connection with the fox deepened, so too did her understanding of loneliness and her sense of belonging in the wild world around us.
Beautiful Country
By qian julie wang.
In her celebrated coming-of-age memoir , Qian Julie Wang recounts the story of her immigrant family, who emigrated from China and moved to America without documentation. Desperate for work, her former professor parents became sweatshop workers in New York City, while Wang struggled to fit in as a 7-year-old transplant. Wang’s lyrical narrative details how she sought refuge in books, found magic in the streets of Brooklyn, and navigated life as the child of a family whose “illegality” forced them into the shadows.
By Tarana Burke
In this powerful new autobiography, Tarana Burke – the activist who founded the Me Too movement – shares her story of struggle, strength, and advocacy. Burke bravely chronicles her life story, documenting the sexual abuse she suffered as a child and the inspiration she found in supporting young Black and brown girls. By empowering others and fostering community, Burke freed herself from the guilt, shame, and isolation she experienced as a survivor of abuse – and rose to become the leader of a worldwide movement.
There's a Hole in My Bucket
By royd tolkien.
Royd Tolkien is the great-grandson of J.R.R. Tolkien, and his new memoir proves that inspired storytelling runs in the family. Royd’s narrative pays tribute to his brother, Mike, who was diagnosed with ALS and who passed away at an early age. After Mike’s diagnosis, the brothers made it their mission to tick off as much as possible on Mike’s bucket list. After Mike’s death, however, Royd discovered a second list that his brother had left behind: 50 things for Royd to complete on his own. The challenges send Royd on an inspiring new journey, one that pushes him far outside his comfort zone and reminds him to cherish the fleeting beauty of life.
Bourdain: The Definitive Oral Biography
By laurie woolever.
Food writer and editor Laurie Woolever offers an unprecedented look into the life of Anthony Bourdain, the beloved chef who passed away in 2018. Woolever was Bourdain’s longtime assistant and confidante. In her new release, she draws on her personal experiences and interviews with Bourdain’s close family and friends to celebrate a life cut short. The food memoir traces Bourdain’s journey from his childhood through his years of success as a globe-trotting gourmand, producing an intimate portrait of the culinary icon.
Somebody's Daughter
By ashley c. ford.
Ashley C. Ford’s bestselling new autobiography is a heart-wrenching account of her experience growing up as the daughter of an incarcerated parent. During her childhood, Ford’s father was in prison – for what, she did not know. Young Ashley and her mother struggled to get by in Indiana. With unflinching prose, Ford chronicles her search for meaning while facing poverty and a racist system, laying bare the hardships and abuse she endured as a young Black girl and her reckoning with the truth about her father’s crimes.
By Bernardine Evaristo
In her celebrated new memoir, Booker Prize–winning author Bernadine Evaristo delivers an impassioned narrative about finding your voice and staying true to your vision. The famed writer, teacher, and activist chronicles her creative journey and her commitment to sharing “untold” stories, alongside examining contemporary social issues of sex, race, class, gender, and age. The result is an inspirational and multifaceted account that urges readers to never give up, no matter the obstacle.
Real Estate
By deborah levy.
Deborah Levy’s latest release is the third entry in her Living Autobiography series. In it, she delivers a thoughtful examination of “home” and how it intersects with concepts such as ownership, patriarchy, and belongingness. Drawing on gender theory and philosophy as well as her own personal experiences, Levy crafts a moving meditation on the ways we value and devalue womanhood and women’s lived experiences.
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50 best autobiographies & biographies of all time
Enlightening and inspiring: these are the best autobiographies and biographies of 2024, and all time. .
Reading an autobiography can offer a unique insight into a world and experience very different from your own – and these real-life stories are even more entertaining, and stranger, than fiction . Take a glimpse into the lives of some of the world's most inspiring and successful celebrities , politicians and sports people and more in our edit of the best autobiographies and biographies to read right now.
- New autobiographies & biographies
- Inspiring autobiographies & biographies
- Sports autobiographies & biographies
- Celebrity autobiographies & biographies
- Political & historical autobiographies
- Literary autobiographies & biographies
The best new autobiographies and biographies
Charles iii, by robert hardman.
Meet the man behind the monarch in this new biography of King Charles III by royal expert and journalist Robert Hardman. Charting Charles III’s extraordinary first year on the throne, a year plighted by sadness and family scandal, Hardman shares insider details on the true nature of the Windsor family feud, and Queen Camilla’s role within the Royal Family. Detailing the highs and lows of royal life in dazzling detail, this new biography of the man who waited his whole life to be King is one of 2024’s must-reads.
Sociopath: A Memoir
By patric gagne.
The most unputdownable memoir you’ll read this year, Sociopath is the story of Patric Gagne, and her extraordinary life lived on the edge. With seering honestly, Patric explains how, as a child she always knew she was different. Graduating from feelings of apathy to petty theft and stalking, she realised as an adult that she was a sociopath, uncaring of the impact of her actions on others. Sharing the conflict she feels between her impulses, and her desire to live a settled, loving life with her partner, Sociopath is a fascinating story of one woman’s journey to find a place for herself in the world.
Lisa Marie Presley's memoir
By lisa marie presley.
Lisa Marie Presley was never truly understood . . . until now. Before her death in 2023, she’d been working on a raw, riveting, one-of-a-kind memoir for years, recording countless hours of breathtakingly vulnerable tape, which has finally been put on the page by her daughter, Riley Keough.
Went to London, Took the Dog: A Diary
By nina stibbe.
Ten years after the publication of the prize-winning Love, Nina comes the author’s diary of her return to London in her sixty-first year. After twenty years, Nina Stibbe, accompanied by her dog Peggy, stays with writer Debby Moggach in London for a year. With few obligations, Nina explores the city, reflecting on her past and embracing new experiences. From indulging in banana splits to navigating her son's dating life, this diary captures the essence of a sixty-year-old runaway finding her place as a "proper adult" once and for all.
Beyond the Story
In honor of BTS's 10th anniversary, this remarkable book serves as the band's inaugural official release, offering a treasure trove of unseen photographs and exclusive content. With Myeongseok Kang's extensive interviews and years of coverage, the vibrant world of K-pop springs to life. As digital pioneers, BTS's online presence has bridged continents, and this volume grants readers instant access to trailers, music videos, and more, providing a comprehensive journey through BTS's defining moments. Complete with a milestone timeline, Beyond the Story stands as a comprehensive archive, encapsulating everything about BTS within its pages.
Hildasay to Home
By christian lewis.
The follow-up to his bestselling memoir Finding Hildasay , in Hildasay to Home Christian Lewis tells the next chapter of his extraordinary journey, step by step. From the unexpected way he found love, to his and Kate's journey on foot back down the coastline and into their new lives as parents to baby Marcus, Christian shares his highs and lows as he and his dog Jet leave Hildasay behind. Join the family as they adjust to life away from the island, and set off on a new journey together.
by Carolyn Hays
This moving memoir is an ode to Hays' transgender daughter – a love letter to a child who has always known herself. After a caseworker from the Department of Children and Families knocked on the door to investigate an anonymous complaint about the upbringing of their transgender child, the Hays family moved away from their Republican state. In A Girlhood, Hays tells of the brutal truths of being trans, of the sacrificial nature of motherhood and of the lengths a family will go to shield their youngest from the cruel realities of the world. Hays asks us all to love better, for children everywhere enduring injustice and prejudice.
by Prince Harry
The fastest-selling non-fiction book of all time and packed with revelations, Spare is Prince Harry's story. Twelve-year-old Harry was known as the carefree one; the happy-go-lucky Spare to the more serious Heir until the loss of his mother changed everything. Then, at twenty-one, he joined the British Army, resulting in post-traumatic stress. Amidst this, the Prince also couldn't find love. Then he met Meghan. But from the beginning, Harry and Meghan were preyed upon by the press, subjected to waves of abuse, racism, and lies. For the first time, Prince Harry tells his own story, chronicling his journey with raw, unflinching honesty.
Is This Ok?
By harriet gibsone.
Harriet spent much of her young life feeding neuroses and insecurities with obsessive internet searching and indulging in whirlwind ‘parasocial relationships'. But after a diagnosis of early menopause in her late twenties, her relationship with the internet took a darker turn, as her online addictions were thrown into sharp relief by the corporeal realities of illness and motherhood. An outrageously funny, raw and painfully honest account of trying to find connection in the age of the internet, Is This Ok? is the stunning literary debut from music journalist, Harriet Gibsone.
Winner of Pulitzer Prize in Memoir, Stay True is a deeply moving and intimate memoir about growing up and moving through the world in search of meaning and belonging. When Hua Hsu first meets Ken in a Berkeley dorm room, he hates him. A frat boy with terrible taste in music, Ken seems exactly like everyone else. For Hua, Ken represents all that he defines himself in opposition to – the mainstream. The only thing Hua, the son of Taiwanese immigrants, and Ken, whose Japanese American family has been in the US for generations, have in common is that, however they engage with it, American culture doesn’t seem to have a place for either of them.
Life's Work
By david milch.
Best known for creating smash-hit shows including NYPD Blue and Deadwood, you’d be forgiven for thinking that David Milch had lived a charmed life of luxury and stardom. In this, his new memoir, Milch dispels that myth, shedding light on his extraordinary life in the spotlight. Born in Buffalo New York to a father gripped by drug-addiction, Milch enrolled at Yale Law befire being expelled and finding his true passion for writing. Written following his diagnosis with Alzheimer’s in 2015, in Life’s Work Milch records his joys, sadnesses and struggles with startling clarity and grace.
Will You Care If I Die?
By nicolas lunabba.
In a world where children murder children, and where gun violence is the worst in Europe, Nicolas Lunabba's job as a social organizer with Malmö's underclass requires firm boundaries and emotional detachment. But all that changes when he meets Elijah – an unruly teenage boy of mixed heritage whose perilous future reminds Nicolas of his own troubled past amongst the marginalized people who live on the fringes of every society. Written as a letter to Elijah, Will You Care If I Die? is a disarmingly direct memoir about social class, race, friendship and unexpected love.
The best inspiring autobiographies and biographies
By yusra mardini.
After fleeing her native Syria to the Turkish coast in 2015, Yusra Mardini boarded a small dinghy full of refugees headed for Greece. On the journey, the boat's engine cut out and it started to sink. Yusra, her sister, and two others took to the water to push the overcrowded boat for three and a half hours in open water, saving the lives of those on board. Butterfly is Yusra Mardini's journey from war-torn Damascus to Berlin and from there to the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Game. A UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador and one of People magazine's 25 Women Changing the World, discover Yusra and her incredible story of resilience and unstoppable spirit.
Finding Hildasay
After hitting rock bottom having suffered with depression for years, Christian Lewis made an impulsive decision to walk the entire coastline of the UK. Just a few days later he set off with a tent, walking boots and a tenner in his pocket. Finding Hildasay tells us some of this incredible story, including the brutal three months Christian Lewis spent on the uninhabited island of Hildasay in Scotland with no fresh water or food. It was there, where his route was most barren, that he discovered pride and respect for himself. This is not just a story of a remarkable journey, but one of depression, survival and the meaning of home.
The Happiest Man on Earth
By eddie jaku.
A lesson in how happiness can be found in the darkest of times, this is the story of Eddie Jaku, a German Jew who survived seven years at the hands of the Nazis. Eddie Jaku always considered himself a German first, and a Jew second. All of that changed in November 1938, when he was beaten, arrested and taken to a concentration camp. But through his courage and tenacity he still came to live life as 'the happiest man on earth'. Published at the author turns one hundred, The Happiest Man on Earth is a heartbreaking but hopeful memoir full of inspiration.
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3 lessons to learn from Eddie Jaku
I know why the caged bird sings, by maya angelou.
A favourite book of former president Obama and countless others, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings , recounts Angelou’s childhood in the American south in the 1930s. A beautifully written classic, this is the first of Maya Angelou's seven bestselling autobiographies.
I Am Malala
By malala yousafzai.
After speaking out about her right to education almost cost her her life, Malala Yousafzi refused to be silenced. Instead, her amazing story has taken her all over the world. This is the story of Malala and her inspirational family, and of how one person's voice can inspire change across the globe.
In Extremis: The Life of War Correspondent Marie Colvin
By lindsey hilsum.
In her job as a foreign correspondent, Marie Colvin reported from some of the most dangerous places in the world. It was a job that would eventually cost her her life. In this posthumous biography of the award-winning news journalist, Lindsey Hilsum shares the story of one of the most daring and inspirational women of our times with warmth and wit, conveying Colvin's trademark glamour.
The best memoirs
This is going to hurt, by adam kay.
Offering a unique insight into life as an NHS junior doctor through his diary entries, Adam Kay's bestselling autobiography is equal parts heartwarming and humorous, and oftentimes horrifying too. With 97-hour weeks, life and death decisions and a tsunami of bodily fluids, Kay provides a no-holds-barred account of working on the NHS frontline. Now a major BBC comedy-drama, don't miss this special edition of This Is Going To Hurt including a bonus diary entries and an afterword from the author.
The Colour of Madness
By samara linton.
The Colour of Madness brings together memoirs, essays, poetry, short fiction and artworks by people of colour who have experienced difficulties with mental health. From experiencing micro-aggressions to bias, and stigma to religious and cultural issues, people of colour have to fight harder than others to be heard and helped. Statistics show that people from Black and minority ethnic backgrounds in the UK experience poor mental health treatment in comparison to their white counterparts, and are more likely to be held under the Mental Health Act.
Nothing But The Truth
By the secret barrister.
How do you become a barrister? Why do only 1 per cent of those who study law succeed in joining this mysterious profession? And why might a practising barrister come to feel the need to reveal the lies, secrets, failures and crises at the heart of this world of wigs and gowns? Full of hilarious, shocking and surprising stories, Nothing But The Truth tracks the Secret Barrister’s transformation from hang ‘em and flog ‘em, austerity-supporting twenty-something to a campaigning, bestselling, reforming author whose writing in defence of the law is celebrated around the globe.
by Michelle Obama
This bestselling autobiography lifts the lid on the life of one of the most inspiring women of a generation, former first lady Michelle Obama. From her childhood as a gifted young woman in south Chicago to becoming the first black First Lady of the USA, Obama tells the story of her extraordinary life with humour, warmth and honesty.
Kitchen Confidential
By anthony bourdain.
Regarded as one of the greatest books about food ever written, Kitchen Confidential lays bare the wild tales of the culinary industry. From his lowly position as a dishwasher in Provincetown to cooking at some of the finest restaurants across the world, the much-loved Bourdain translates his sultry, sarcastic and quick-witted personality to paper in this uncensored 'sex, drugs, bad behaviour and haute cuisine' account of life as a professional chef. Bourdain's tales of the kitchen are as passionate as they are unpredictable, as shocking as they are funny.
Everything I Know About Love
By dolly alderton.
Dolly Alderton, perhaps more than any other author, represents the rise of the messy millennial woman – in the very best way possible. Her internationally bestselling memoir gives an unflinching account of the bad dates and squalid flat-shares, the heartaches and humiliations, and most importantly, the unbreakable female friendships that defined her twenties. She weaves together personal stories, satirical observations, a series of lists, recipes, and other vignettes that will strike a chord of recognition with women of every age. This is a memoir that you'll discuss with loved ones long after the final page.
The best sports autobiographies and biographies
By chris kamara.
Presenter, commentator, (sometimes masked) singer, footballer, manager and campaigner, Kammy's action-packed career has made him a bona fide British hero. Kammy had a tough upbringing, faced racism on the terraces during his playing career and has, in recent years, dealt with a rare brain condition – apraxia – that has affected his speech and seen him say goodbye to Sky Sports. With entertaining stories of his playing career from Pompey to Leeds and beyond; his management at Bradford City and Stoke; his crazy travels around the world; of Soccer Saturday banter; presenting Ninja Warrior ; and the incredible friendships he's made along the way, Kammy is an unforgettable ride from one of Britain's best-loved broadcasters.
Alone on the Wall
By alex honnold.
In the last forty years, only a handful of climbers have pushed themselves as far, ‘free soloing’ to the absolute limit of human capabilities. Half of them are dead. Although Alex Honnold’s exploits are probably a bit too extreme for most of us, the stories behind his incredible climbs are exciting, uplifting and truly awe-inspiring. Alone on the Wall is a book about the essential truth of being free to pursue your passions and the ability to maintain a singular focus, even in the face of mortal danger. This updated edition contains the account of Alex's El Capitan climb, which is the subject of the Oscar and BAFTA winning documentary, Free Solo .
On Days Like These
By martin o'neill.
Martin O’Neill has had one of the most incredible careers in football. With a story spanning over fifty years, Martin tells of his exhilarating highs and painful lows; from the joys of winning trophies, promotion and fighting for World Cups to being harangued by fans, boardroom drama, relegation scraps and being fired. Written with his trademark honesty and humour, On Days Like These is one of the most insightful and captivating sports autobiographies and a must-read for any fans of the beautiful game.
Too Many Reasons to Live
By rob burrow.
As a child, Rob Burrow was told he was too small to be a rugby player. Some 500 games for Leeds later, Rob had proved his doubters wrong: he won eight Super League Grand Finals, two Challenge Cups, three World Club Challenges and played for his country in two World Cups. In 2019 though, Rob was diagnosed with motor neurone disease and given just two years to live. He went public with the news, determined to fight it all the way. Full of love, bravery and kindness, this is the story of a man who has awed his fans with his positive attitude to life.
With You Every Step, a celebration of friendship by Rob Burrow and Kevin Sinfield
At home with muhammad ali, by hana yasmeen ali.
Written by his daughter Ali using material from her father's audio journals, love letters and her treasured family memories, this sports biography offers an intimate portrait of one of boxing's most legendary figures, and one of the most iconic sports personalities of all time.
They Don't Teach This
By eniola aluko.
In her autobiography, footballer Eni Aluko addresses themes of dual nationality, race and institutional prejudice, success, gender and faith through her own experiences growing up in Britain. Part memoir, part manifesto for change, They Don't Teach This is a must-read book for 2020.
Touching The Void
By joe simpson.
A million-copy bestseller, Touching The Void recounts Joe Simpson and Simon Yate's near fatal dscent after climbing Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes. A few days after reaching the summit of the mountain, Simon staggered into Base Camp, exhausted and frost-bitten, with news that that Joe was dead. What happened to Joe, and how the pair dealt with the psychological traumas that resulted when Simon was forced into the appalling decision to cut the rope, makes not only an epic of survival but a compelling testament of friendship.
The best celebrity autobiographies and biographies
By adrian edmondson.
From brutal schooldays to 80s anarchy, through The Young Ones and beyond, Berserker! is the one-of-a-kind, fascinating memoir from an icon of British comedy, Adrian Edmondson. His star-studded anecdotes and outrageous stories are set to a soundtrack of pop hits, transporting the reader through time and cranking up the nostalgia. But, as one would expect, these stories are also a guaranteed laugh as Ade traces his journey through life and comedy.
Being Henry
By henry winkler.
Brilliant, funny, and widely-regarded as the nicest man in Hollywood, Henry Winkler shares the disheartening truth of his childhood, the difficulties of a life with severe dyslexia and the pressures of a role that takes on a life of its own. Since the glorious era of Happy Days fame, Henry has endeared himself to a new generation with roles in such adored shows as Arrested Development and Barry , where he’s revealed himself as an actor with immense depth and pathos. But Being Henry is about so much more than a life in Hollywood and the curse of stardom. It is a meaningful testament to the power of sharing truth and of finding fulfillment within yourself.
What Are You Doing Here?
By floella benjamin.
Actress, television presenter, member of the House of Lords – Baroness Floella Benjamin is an inspiration to many. But it hasn't always been easy: in What Are You Doing Here? she describes her journey to London as part of the Windrush generation, and the daily racism that caused her so much pain as a child. She has gone on to remain true to her values, from breaking down barriers as a Play School presenter to calling for diversity at the BBC and BAFTA to resisting the pressures of typecasting. Sharing the lessons she has learned, imbued with her joy and positivity, this autobiography is the moving testimony of a remarkable woman.
Life Lessons
By jay blades.
‘Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be experienced.’ Let Jay’s words of wisdom – gleaned from his own triumphs over adversity – help you to find your best path through life. Filled with characteristic warmth and humour, Jay talks about the life lessons that have helped him to find positivity and growth, no matter what he’s found himself facing. Jay shares not only his adventures and escapades but also the way they have shaped his outlook and helped him to live life to the fullest. His insight and advice give you everything you need to be able to reframe your own circumstances and make the best of them.
A Funny Life
By michael mcintyre.
Comic Michael McIntyre specialises in pin-sharp observational routines that have made him the world's bestselling funny man. But when he turns his gaze to himself and his own family, things get even funnier. This bracingly honest memoir covers the highs, lows and pratfalls of a career in comedy, as Michael climbs the greasy pole of success and desperately attempts to stay up there.
by Elton John
Elton John is one of the most successful singer/songwriters of all time, but success didn't come easily to him. In his bestselling autobiography, he charts his extraordinary life, from the early rejection of his work to the heady heights of international stardom and the challenges that came along with it. With candour and humour, he tells the stories of celebrity friendships with John Lennon, George Michael and Freddie Mercury, and of how he turned his life around and found love with David Furnish. Me is the real story of the man behind the music.
And Away...
By bob mortimer.
National treasure and beloved entertainer, Bob Mortimer, takes us from his childhood in Middlesborough to working as a solicitor in London in his highly acclaimed autobiography. Mortimer’s life was trundling along happily until suddenly in 2015 he was diagnosed with a heart condition that required immediate surgery and forced him to cancel an upcoming tour. The book covers his numerous misadventures along his path to fame but also reflects on more serious themes, making this both one of the most humorous and poignant celebrity memoirs of recent years.
by Walter Isaacson
Based on interviews conducted with Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson's biography of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs is filled with lessons about innovation, leadership, and values and has inspired a movie starring Michael Fassbender, Kate Winslet and Seth Rogen. Isaacson tells the story of the rollercoaster life and searingly intense personality of creative entrepreneur whose passion for perfection and ferocious drive revolutionized the tech industry. Although Jobs cooperated with this book, he asked for no control over what was written and put nothing off limits, making this an unflinchingly candid account of one of the key figures of modern history.
Maybe I Don't Belong Here
By david harewood.
When David Harewood was twenty-three, his acting career began to take flight and he had what he now understands to be a psychotic breakdown. He was physically restrained by six police officers, sedated, then hospitalized and transferred to a locked ward. Only now, thirty years later, has he been able to process what he went through. In this powerful and provocative account of a life lived after psychosis, critically acclaimed actor, David Harewood, uncovers a devastating family history and investigates the very real impact of racism on Black mental health.
Scenes from My Life
By michael k. williams.
When Michael K. Williams died on 6 September 2021, he left behind a career as one of the most electrifying actors of his generation. At the time of his death, Williams had nearly finished his memoir, which traces his life in whole, from his childhood and his early years as a dancer to his battles with addiction. Alongside his achievements on screen he was a committed activist who dedicated his life to helping at-risk young people find their voice and carve out their future. Imbued with poignance and raw honesty, Scenes from My Life is the story of a performer who gave his all to everything he did – in his own voice, in his own words.
The best political and historical autobiographies
The fall of boris johnson, by sebastian payne.
Sebastian Payne, Whitehall Editor for the Financial Times, tells the behind-the-scenes story of the fall of former Prime Minister, Boris Johnson. After being touted saviour of the Conservative Party, it took Johnson just three years to resign after a series of scandals. From the blocked suspension of Owen Patterson to Partygate and the Chris Pincher allegations, Payne gives us unparalleled access to those who were in the room when key decisions were made, ultimately culminating in Boris's downfall. This is a gripping and timely look at how power is gained, wielded and lost in Britain today.
by Sung-Yoon Lee
The Sister , written by Sung-Yoon Lee, a scholar and specialist on North Korea, uncovers the truth about Kim Yo Jong and her close bond with Kim Jong Un. In 2022, Kim Yo Jong threatened to nuke South Korea, reminding the world of the dangers posed by her state. But how did the youngest daughter of Dear Leader Kim Jong Il, his ‘sweet princess’, become the ruthless chief propagandist, internal administrator and foreign policymaker for her brother’s totalitarian regime? Readable and insightful, this book is an invaluable portrait of a woman who might yet hold the survival of her despotic dynasty in her hands.
Long Walk To Freedom
By nelson mandela.
Deemed 'essential reading for anyone who wants to understand history' by former US President, Barack Obama, this is the autobiography of one of the world's greatest moral and political leaders, Nelson Mandela. Imprisoned for more than 25 years, president of the African National Congress and head of South Africa's anti-apartheid movement, the Nobel Peace Prize winner's life was nothing short of extraordinary. Long Walk to Freedom vividly tells this story; one of hardship, resilience and ultimate triumph, written with the clarity and eloquence of a born leader.
The Diary of a Young Girl
By anne frank.
No list of inspiring autobiographies would be complete without Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl . Charting the thirteen-year-old's time hiding in a 'Secret Annex' with her family to escape Gestapo detection, this book (which was discovered after Anne Frank's death), is a must-read, and a testament to the courage shown by the millions persecuted during the Second World War.
The best literary autobiographies
The immortal life of henrietta lacks, by rebecca skloot.
Born to a poor black tobacco farmer in rural Virginia in 1920, Henrietta Lacks died of cancer when she was just 31. However, her story does not end there, as her cancer cells, taken without permission during her treatment continued to live on being used for research all over the world and becoming a multi-million dollar industry, with her family only learning of her impact more than two decades after her death. In The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks Rebecca Skloot tells the story of a woman who never knew of her lifesaving impact and asks: do we ever really own our bodies?
A Fortunate Woman
By polly morland.
Funny, emotional and imbued with great depth, A Fortunate Woman is an exploration of the life of a country doctor in a remote and wild wooded valley in the Forest of Dean. The story was sparked when writer and documentary maker Polly Morland found a photograph of the valley she lives in tucked inside a tattered copy of John Berger’s A Fortunate Man . Itself an account of the life of a country doctor, the book inspired a woman doctor to follow her vocation in the same remote place. And it is the story of this woman that Polly Morland tells, in this compelling portrait of landscape and community.
Father and Son
By jonathan raban.
On 11 June 2011, three days short of his sixty-ninth birthday, Jonathan Raban suffered a stroke which left him unable to use the right side of his body. Learning to use a wheelchair in a rehab facility outside Seattle and resisting the ministrations of the nurses overseeing his recovery, Raban began to reflect upon the measure of his own life in the face of his own mortality. Together with the chronicle of his recovery is the extraordinary story of his parents’ marriage, the early years of which were conducted by letter while his father fought in the Second World War.
Crying in H Mart
By michelle zauner.
This radiant read by singer, songwriter and guitarist Michelle Zauner delves into the experience of being the only Asian-American child at her school in Eugene, Oregon, combined with family struggles and blissful escapes to her grandmother's tiny Seoul apartment. The family bond is the shared love of Korean food, which helped Michelle reclaim her Asian identity in her twenties. A lively, honest, riveting read.
The Reluctant Carer
By the reluctant carer.
The phone rings. Your elderly father has been taken to hospital, and your even older mother is home with nobody to look after her. What do you do? Drop everything and go and help of course. But it's not that straightforward, and your own life starts to fall apart as quickly as their health. Irresistibly funny, unflinching and deeply moving, this is a love letter to family and friends, to carers and to anyone who has ever packed a small bag intent on staying for just a few days. This is a true story of what it really means to be a carer, and of the ties that bind even tighter when you least expect it.
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The 100 best non-fiction books of all time, the best sports books and autobiographies, must reads: 50 best books of all time.
Best Autobiographies
These are the top autobiographies and memoirs according to the web’s most popular book blogs. ranked by how often they were featured..
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Best Biographies » New Biography
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The best new biographies. We scrutinized the bookshelves to bring you the best of the recent biographies. "There’s no rubric for what makes a great biography—they just provide a sense of what it means to be human"—Elizabeth Taylor, author, critic and chair of the National Book Critics' Circle biography committee.
Monet: The Restless Vision
By jackie wullschläger.
Read expert recommendations
“As I read it, at first Monet is not an attractive character. You think, ‘This is absolutely why, as a woman, you should not live with an artist.’ It’s full of scrounging letters, and the suffering of these women who are, of course, immortalised in beautiful portraits by him, but following him around or being abandoned by him…She explains quite how it is that he comes to revolutionise art and to create these ravishing works that are just luminous. She writes very beautifully about it. As life goes on, instead of being improvident, he becomes very wealthy. Finally, you see him at Giverny employing six gardeners, one of whom has to dust off the water lilies! There’s great pathos. You’re won over to him, as his life goes on, and see how he, too, has suffered for his art. It’s a rich and moving account.” Read more...
The Best Nonfiction Books: The 2024 Duff Cooper Prize
Susan Brigden , Historian
Marcus Aurelius: The Stoic Emperor
By donald j. robertson.
“In another Yale series, Ancient Lives, there’s a new biography of the 2nd-century Roman emperor, Marcus Aurelius, whose book, Meditations , is often recommended for those interested in the ancient philosophy of Stoicism. It’s by Donald Robertson, a cognitive behavioural psychotherapist and a firm believer that Stoicism has much to teach us in our daily lives.” Read more...
Nonfiction Books to Look Out for in Early 2024
Sophie Roell , Journalist
Who Is Big Brother?: A Reader's Guide to George Orwell
By d j taylor.
“On the subject of political dystopias, Orwell biographer D.J. Taylor has a new book out about him: Who is Big Brother? A Reader’s Guide to George Orwell . You’ll learn a lot about Orwell’s life and how it made its way into his books.” Read more...
Maurice and Maralyn: A Whale, a Shipwreck, a Love Story
By sophie elmhirst.
“ Maurice and Maralyn by Sophie Elmshirst is about an ordinary couple from Derby who set out to sail around the world in the early 1970s. The reason we know about them is that theirs turned into a survival story: their boat was sunk by a sperm whale and they were left adrift on a raft in the Pacific Ocean for 118 days. It’s an easy and engaging read: I started it one evening after dinner and stayed up to finish it just after midnight.” Read more...
We Are Free to Change the World: Hannah Arendt’s Lessons in Love and Disobedience
By lyndsey stonebridge.
We Are Free to Change the World by Lyndsey Stonebridge is an excellent, well-written book that shows why Hannah Arendt is still an important and sometimes controversial thinker today.
The Genius of their Age: Ibn Sina, Biruni, and the Lost Enlightenment
By s. frederick starr.
“Also hailing from central Asia are the main protagonists of The Genius of Their Age: Ibn Sina, Biruni and the Lost Enlightenment by S. Frederick Starr. It’s a dual biography of Ibn Sina (aka Avicenna) and Biruni, key figures in the flowering of science and philosophy that took place in the Islamic world in the Middle Ages. Both men were born in the 10th century in modern-day Uzbekistan. This is an important period for anyone interested in the history of science, a missing gap in Western curricula (at least in my day).” Read more...
Schubert: A Musical Wayfarer
By lorraine byrne bodley.
“Other biographies published recently include one about the Austrian composer Franz Schubert (1797-1828). It’s called Schubert: A Musical Wayfarer by Lorraine Byrne Bodley, a professor of musicology at Maynooth University. Schubert famously died aged just 31, but striking early in the book is how old that was compared to some of his siblings. This book is written so it’s accessible to non-musicians, but this is a serious work of scholarship.” Read more...
Notable Nonfiction of Fall 2023
Ian Fleming: The Complete Man
By nicholas shakespeare.
“Another is Nicholas Shakespeare’s biography of Ian Fleming, author of the James Bond books. Ian Fleming: The Complete Man is an authorized biography and offsets some of the more negative accounts of his life as a train wreck which ended early (he died of heart disease at age 56)…Both my parents were Dutch and I suppose like others around the world we half-believed that James Bond/Ian Fleming was a typical mid-20th century Englishman. With this book, we find out a bit more what Fleming was actually like.” Read more...
by Walter Isaacson
“Isaacson sat at the feet of Musk – literally, in the same room as Musk – for two or three years, I think. The whole second half of the book is about the last three years, so it’s very detailed. It’s very much reporting. He doesn’t step back except right at the end, and then to make a rather general point about how you need the good and the bad in order to have a genius…Isaacson doesn’t say, ‘I’m now going to make a judgment on what’s happened.’ It’s very much an account of being with this extraordinary, tempestuous entrepreneur…It’s a long book with very short chapters. It’s quite punchy, in that sense of ‘OK now we’re moving on’ which gives you a bit of an impression of what it must be like to live with or work with Elon Musk. But it doesn’t then step back and say how significant it is.” Read more...
The Best Business Books of 2023: the Financial Times Business Book of the Year Award
Andrew Hill , Journalist
Vergil: The Poet's Life
By sarah ruden.
“One interesting book for fans of the great epic poem of the Augustus years, the Aeneid, is a literary biography of its author, Vergil. Vergil: The Poet’s Life is by American scholar and translator Sarah Ruden. Other than his poem, we don’t know much about the author, so Ruden has to do a lot of heavy lifting, but why not? Ruden recently translated the Aeneid , and you can also read her Five Books interview about Vergil.” Read more...
Spinoza: Life and Legacy
By jonathan israel.
Spinoza: Life and Legacy is a new biography of the 17th-century Dutch-Jewish philosopher, Baruch Spinoza , by historian Jonathan Israel. Israel is a leading historian of early modern Europe, and an expert on the Dutch Republic, the tolerant—by 17th-century standards—world in which Spinoza grew up. His parents had fled Portugal because of the Inquisition and, as Israel points out, that "dark Iberian context was a crucial factor in Spinoza's background, early life, and formation and likewise an essential dimension for understanding his thought generally." The book builds on Steven Nadler's biography of Spinoza , and at more than 1,200 pages is absolutely not for beginners. Rather, it's for those seeking to think deeply—and disagree with Israel at times, no doubt—about Spinoza and his life and thought.
(If you're looking for a more introductory approach to Spinoza, our interview about him is with Steven Nadler )
Ramesses the Great: Egypt's King of Kings
By toby wilkinson.
“Other biographies out these past three months include Ramesses the Great by Toby Wilkinson, the Cambridge Egyptologist…Both rulers spent a lot of time and energy building their reputations, which may be why we’re reading about them three millennia…later” Read more...
Notable Nonfiction of Early Summer 2023
Straits: Beyond the Myth of Magellan
By felipe fernández-armesto.
Straits: Beyond the Myth of Magellan is historian Felipe Fernandez-Armesto's takedown of the Portuguese explorer whose disastrous expedition was the first to circumnavigate the globe.
Rebels Against the Raj
By ramachandra guha.
🏆 Winner of the 2023 Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography
The foreigners who fought against Franco in Spain are much feted in literature and the popular imagination, those who helped India fight for its independence from the British Empire not so much. In this book, Indian historian Ramachandra Guha tells the story of seven of them (five Brits and two Americans), rescuing them from obscurity.
G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century
By beverly gage.
🏆 Winner of the 2023 NBCC Biography Award
“Hoover answered to no voters. The quintessential ‘Government Man,’ a counselor and advisor to eight U.S. presidents, of both political parties, he was one of the most powerful, unelected government officials in history. He reigned over the Federal Bureau of Investigations from 1924 to 1972. Hoover began as a young reformer and—as he accrued power—was simultaneously loathed and admired. Through Hoover, Gage skilfully guides readers through the full arc of 20th-century America, and contends: ‘We cannot know our own story without understanding his.'” Read more...
The Best Biographies of 2023: The National Book Critics Circle Shortlist
Elizabeth Taylor , Biographer
All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days: The True Story of the Woman at the Heart of the German Resistance to Hitler
By rebecca donner.
🏆 Winner of the 2021 National Book Critics Circle award for biography
🏆 Winner of the PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld award for biography
The highly acclaimed biography of Mildred Harnack, an American doctoral student living in Germany during the rise of the Third Reich, who became an important anti-Nazi activist and later a spy for Allied forces during the Second World War. Arrested by the Gestapo in Sweden, she was tried by a Nazi military court and finally executed on the orders of Adolf Hitler. In All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days , Harnack's great-great-niece reconstructs her story in an astonishing work of nonfiction that draws together letters, intelligence documents and the testimony of survivors to create this remarkable story of moral courage.
King: A Life
By jonathan eig.
“I was excited to see a new biography of Martin Luther King Jr. by American journalist and biographer Jonathan Eig. Like many foreigners who spend time in the US, I was aware who Martin Luther King Jr. was and his importance, but not the details nor why he shared a name with a 16th-century German monk (whom my history professors at Oxford seemed to think important). This biography is highly readable and, according to the introduction, draws on new information, particularly on Mike’s father.” Read more...
The Escape Artist: The Man Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World
By jonathan freedland.
“This book is extraordinary because Rudolf Vrba and a fellow inmate, Alfred Wetzler, were the first Jews ever to break out of Auschwitz. Jonathan Freedland is a fiction writer too—he writes thrillers under the name Sam Bourne—so there is an element of thriller in the way that he describes this escape and the build-up to it. It is incredibly heart-in-your-mouth compelling. But it’s a bigger story than just one man’s breakout. Vrba goes on to try and put the word out about what’s going on in Auschwitz and saves many lives in the process. The book is memorializing one man’s heroism.” Read more...
The Best Nonfiction Books: The 2022 Baillie Gifford Prize Shortlist
Caroline Sanderson , Journalist
The Reason for the Darkness of the Night: Edgar Allan Poe and the Forging of American Science
By john tresch.
✩ Finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award for biography
✩ Nominated for the Edgar Award for best work of criticism or biography
John Tresch, a professor of history of art and science at the Warburg Institute, situates the iconic American author in an era "when the lines separating entertainment, speculation and scientific inquiry were blurred." The troubled horror writer embraced contradiction, exposing the hoaxes of contemporary scientific fraudsters even as he perpetuated his own.
Peerless among Princes: The Life and Times of Sultan Süleyman
By kaya şahin.
A new biography of Süleyman (often called 'the Magnificent' in the West, but not in this book), the Ottoman sultan who ruled from 1520 to 1566. He was one of the most powerful men in the world but to the modern reader, his life seems utterly tragic. The book is by Kaya Şahin, a historian at Indiana University, who is able to bring his knowledge of Turkish sources to the story. Another aim of the book is "to restore Süleyman's place among the major figures of the sixteenth century"—which also included Henry VIII, Charles V and Francis I (Europe), Ivan IV (Russia), Babur and Akbar (India), Shah Ismail and Shah Tahmasb (Iran).
Kennan: A Life between Worlds
By frank costigliola.
Kennan: A Life between World s is an excellent biography of George Kennan, the American diplomat and Russophile who first raised alarm bells about Stalin after World War II, authoring an anonymous article in Foreign Affairs and "The Long Telegram". His biographer Frank Costigliola brings to life a man who loved Tolstoy and Chekhov, was devastated at never knowing his mother, and spent most of his life opposing the policy of containment towards the Soviet Union that he's best known for.
The Man Who Understood Democracy: The Life of Alexis de Tocqueville
By olivier zunz.
🏆 Winner of the Grand Prix de la Biographie Politique 2022
An excellent biography of Alexis de Tocqueville , the 19th-century French politician and author of Democracy in America and The Ancien Regime and the Revolution .
Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne
By katherine rundell.
🏆 Winner of the 2022 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction
🏆 Winner of the 2023 British Book Award for Non-Fiction: Narrative
“Rundell is a children’s author who also specializes in Renaissance literature and makes the case that Donne should be as widely feted as William Shakespeare, his contemporary. She writes, ‘Donne is the greatest writer of desire in the English language. He wrote about sex in a way that nobody ever has, before or since: he wrote sex as the great insistence on life, the salute, the bodily semaphore for the human living infinite. The word most used across his poetry, part from ‘and’ and ‘the’, is ‘love”.” Read more...
Award Winning Biographies of 2022
The Doctors Blackwell: How Two Pioneering Sisters Brought Medicine to Women and Women to Medicine
By janice p. nimura.
✩ Finalist for the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for biography
A dual biography of Elizabeth and Emily Blackwell, the United States' first female physicians and the founders of the New York Infirmary for Indigent Women and Children, a hospital staffed entirely by women in antebellum America. Through the story of their lives, says the Wall Street Journal , we encounter "a rough-hewn, gaudy, carnival-barking America, with only the thinnest veneer of gentility overlaying cruelty and a simmering violence."
Pessoa: A Biography
By richard zenith.
The Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa wrote prolifically throughout his life, but often under a series of assumed names and identities, which he called 'heteronyms.' Relatively unknown during his lifetime, he left a cache of more than 25,000 papers which are still being studied, translated and published almost a century after his death. Here, the renowned translator and Pessoa scholar offers an insight into Pessoa's teeming imagination and polyphonous genius by tracing the back stories of his alter egos, recasting them as projections of Pessoa's inner tensions—social, sexual, and political.
Mike Nichols: A Life
By mark harris.
✩ Shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle award for biography
A New York Times- bestselling biography of the Hollywood director Mike Nichols, one of America's most prolific and versatile creative figures, by the author of Pictures at a Revolution and Five Came Back . Born Igor Peschkowsky to a Jewish family in 1930s Berlin, Nichols immigrated to the United States as a child, where his incredible drive saw him rise through the social ranks; by 35 he lived in a New York City penthouse overlooking Central Park, with a Rolls Royce, a string of Arabian horses, and a circle of friends that included Richard Burton and Jackie Kennedy. Mark Harris draws on interviews with more than 250 of Nichols' contemporaries to tells this story of a complicated man and his tumultuous career.
Until I Am Free: Fannie Lou Hamer's Enduring Message to America
By keisha n. blain.
✩ Nominated for the NAACP Image Award for an outstanding biography or autobiography
The historian and best-selling author Keisha N. Blain examines the life and work of the Black activist Fannie Lou Hamer, positioning her as a key political thinker alongside leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Rosa Parks.
Clairvoyant of the Small: The Life of Robert Walser
By susan bernofsky.
The first English-language biography of Robert Walser, one of the great literary talents of the twentieth century. In Clairvoyant of the Small, Susan Bernofsky—his award-winning translator—offers a diligently researched and delicately written account of his life and work, setting him in the context of 20th century European history and modernist literature.
Queen of Our Times: The Life of Elizabeth II
By robert hardman.
The Queen of the United Kingdom, Elizabeth II, has been on the throne for 70 years, making her the world's longest-reigning monarch other than Louis XIV of France (1643-1715: he came to the throne aged 4). Lots of events are taking place in the UK to celebrate her Platinum Jubilee, including a number of new books about her life. We have an interview with royal biographer Robert Lacey on the best books about the Queen but it dates from a few years ago. Robert Hardman's Queen of Our Times came out this year and offers a detailed look at her life from birth. The book is readable, chatty almost, and a good corrective to anyone who has watched the Netflix drama The Crown , whose "questionable accuracy" Hardman points out.
Dostoevsky in Love: An Intimate Life
Dostoevsky in Love: An Intimate Life by Alex Christofi tells the story of the great Russian novelist's life by brilliantly intertwining it with his own words, taken from where Dostoevsky's fiction is drawn from his own lived experience. And it was quite some life: amongst other ups and downs, Dostoevsky was nearly executed and spent four years in a Siberian labour camp. You can read more in our interview with Alex Christofi on the best Fyodor Dostoevsky books .
Places of Mind: A Life of Edward Said
By timothy brennan.
Places of Mind is a biography of Edward Said , the Palestinian intellectual who shot to prominence with his damning critique of how Westerners write about the East, Orientalism , in 1978. The biography is written by his student and friend Timothy Brennan.
The Van Gogh Sisters
By willem-jan verlinden.
We've heard much about the crucial role that Theo van Gogh played in the life of his brother, Vincent. But Vincent also had three sisters who were a big influence on him. In fact, it was an argument with his eldest sister, Anna, that was the reason he left the Netherlands. This is their story.
Critical Lives: Hannah Arendt
By samantha rose hill.
***🏆 A Five Books Book of the Year ***
“This book is brilliant. It’s written by Samantha Rose Hill, who must know as much as anyone about Hannah Arendt. She’s dived into Arendt’s surviving papers, notebooks, and even poetry, spending many hours in the archive. And what’s so great about this as a biography is that Hill has done something that biographers rarely do—she’s been highly selective in what she’s included. As a result, we don’t get the feeling of being overwhelmed by details of an individual life but rather get to understand what really mattered.” Read more...
The Best Philosophy Books of 2021
Nigel Warburton , Philosopher
Up from the Depths: Herman Melville, Lewis Mumford, and Rediscovery in Dark Times
By aaron sachs.
“A biography about writing biography! Very meta, and very much in the interdisciplinary tradition of American Studies. In his gorgeous braid of cultural history, Cornell University professor Sachs entwines the lives and work of poet and fiction writer Herman Melville (1819-1891) and the philosopher and literary critic Lewis Mumford (1895-1990), illuminating their coextending concerns about their worlds in crisis. Sachs brilliantly provides the connective tissue between Melville and his biographer Mumford so that these writers seem to be in conversation with one another, both deeply affected by their dark times.” Read more...
Mr. B: George Balanchine’s Twentieth Century
By jennifer homans.
“It’s a biography of a man who almost walks with the 20th century, so you get all that history. Balanchine was of Georgian heritage and grew up in Tsarist Russia. Early on, he was selected to go into the Imperial Ballet School, so he’s on that track. Then, the Russian Revolution happens and everything falls into turmoil on all fronts. There’s a lot of hunger, violence, and chaos…Balanchine eventually winds up in America, where he meets well-connected benefactors and cultural managers. They feel that American ballet hadn’t yet achieved the same level of institutional high standing as Europe. They have the ambition to rectify that and are keen to use people like Balanchine and others who had come over to the US. Eventually, Balanchine sets up the New York City Ballet Company, which, in effect, becomes the country’s national ballet.” Read more...
The Best Nonfiction Books: The 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize Shortlist
Frederick Studemann , Journalist
The Grimkés: The Legacy of Slavery in an American Family
By kerri k. greenidge.
“Greenidge, a professor at Tufts University, brings her unique, perceptive eye to African American civil rights in the North. Sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimke have been exalted as brave heroines who defied antebellum Southern piety and headed northward to embrace abolition. Greenridge makes the powerful case that, in clinging to this mythology, a more troubling story is obscured. In the North, as the Grimke sisters lived comfortably and agitated for change, they enjoyed the financial benefits of their slaveholding family in South Carolina. Greenidge not only provides a revisionist history of the Grimke sisters, but she also extends the Grimke family story beyond the 19 th century.” Read more...
Metaphysical Animals: How Four Women Brought Philosophy Back to Life
By clare mac cumhaill & rachael wiseman.
The story of four mid-20th century philosophers based in Oxford—Elizabeth Anscombe, Iris Murdoch , Philippa Foot and Mary Midgley . With many men who typically dominated academic philosophy away fighting World War II, they were able to make their own mark, arguing for a greater place for metaphysics in philosophical discourse.
The Best Biographies of 2023: The National Book Critics Circle Shortlist , recommended by Elizabeth Taylor
G-man: j. edgar hoover and the making of the american century by beverly gage, the grimkés: the legacy of slavery in an american family by kerri k. greenidge, mr. b: george balanchine’s twentieth century by jennifer homans, metaphysical animals: how four women brought philosophy back to life by clare mac cumhaill & rachael wiseman, up from the depths: herman melville, lewis mumford, and rediscovery in dark times by aaron sachs.
Talented biographers examine the interplay between individual qualities and greater social forces, explains Elizabeth Taylor —chair of the judges for the 2023 National Book Critics Circle award for biography. Here, she offers us an overview of their five-book shortlist, including a garlanded account of the life of J. Edgar Hoover and a group biography of post-war female philosophers.
Talented biographers examine the interplay between individual qualities and greater social forces, explains Elizabeth Taylor—chair of the judges for the 2023 National Book Critics Circle award for biography. Here, she offers us an overview of their five-book shortlist, including a garlanded account of the life of J. Edgar Hoover and a group biography of post-war female philosophers.
We ask experts to recommend the five best books in their subject and explain their selection in an interview.
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The Best 10 Biographies by Women to Add to Your Reading List
From former first ladies to famous actors and standup comedians.
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The books on this list include incredible true stories about remarkable women who overcame great adversity, from Hollywood heavyweights sharing their personal stories for the first time to women journeying through grief, love, heartbreak, and hardship. While some of these books explore what it means to move forward after a violent crime, others explain the influence a person's upbringing had on their identity. Here, we round up 10 of the best biographies of women to add to your reading list in 2024.
'Becoming' by Michelle Obama
Michelle Obama needs no introduction following her eight-year tenure as first lady in the White House, but that doesn't make her story any less remarkable. Becoming covers everything from Michelle's youth in Chicago to her relationship with husband and former president Barack Obama and the way she's learned to juggle working on a world stage alongside raising her family. Rather than shying away from her mistakes, Michelle reflects on her life to date, offering every ounce of wisdom she's gathered, making her memoir an essential read.
'I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban' by Malala Yousafzai with Christina Lamb
When Malala Yousafzai was just 15 years old, she was shot in the head after standing up to the Taliban regarding her right to an education. Seemingly against all odds, Yousafzai survived the attack, and was subsequently awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 for her advocacy on behalf of children and young people. Since then, she has continued her activism by supporting young women to receive an education, while opposing extremism. I Am Malala is Yousafzai's incredible story , told in her own words.
'Inside Out: A Memoir' by Demi Moore
As an award-winning actor and the ex-wife of Bruce Willis , Demi Moore is no stranger to the spotlight. In Inside Out: A Memoir, Moore uses her wit and candor to discuss her unlikely rise to fame, the difficulties she encountered as a Hollywood star, and aspects of her personal life even the most dedicated fan wouldn't know. From her very real battles with sexism to the disintegration of multiple relationships, Moore doesn't hold anything back in her emotional autobiography.
'Know My Name' by Chanel Miller
With Know My Name, Chanel Miller gave up her anonymity as Emily Doe to tell her story. In 2016, Brock Turner was found guilty of three counts of felony sexual assault, for which he was sentenced to six months in county jail, although he would only serve three. Following the trial, Miller's victim impact statement went viral online, in which she revealed the devastating impact the crime had on every aspect of her life. Know My Name is an intimate portrayal of what it's like to survive a life-changing event and find a new forward.
'Finding Me' by Viola Davis
Viola Davis' biography , Finding Me, elevated the actor to EGOT status when she took home a Grammy for her performance of the audiobook, and it's easy to see why. Discussing her humble upbringing on Rhode Island and her quest to forge a career as an actor, Davis encourages honesty and self-reflection when readers look back on their own stories. While Davis' talent is undeniable, her journey to stardom has been anything but simple, making Finding Me an important and timeless read.
'Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology' by Leah Remini: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology
After leaving Scientology in July 2013, Leah Remini was forced to rebuild her life from the ground up. Despite being a famous actor, Remini was seemingly adrift in the world without her former religion and allegedly faced harassment and stalking by the organization for fleeing. Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology tracks Remini's upbringing in the church, the reasons she finally decided to leave, and the ways in which her life changed after she walked away.
'Survival of the Thickest' by Michelle Buteau
Comedian Michelle Buteau has continually proven herself with roles in Netflix movies, such as Someone Great and Always Be My Maybe, and on TV shows like Russian Doll and First Wives Club. In Survival of the Thickest, Buteau provides readers with an insight into her life growing up in New Jersey with Caribbean parents and why she made the move to Miami for college. Both hilarious and intimate, Buteau gets candid about her chaotic life as a standup comedian, starting a family with her Dutch husband, and the difficult decisions she faced when becoming a mother.
'Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail' by Cheryl Strayed
Brought to the big screen in a movie starring Reese Witherspoon , Cheryl Strayed's Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail is a story of resilience, heartbreak, grief, and an 1100-mile solo hike. Leaving behind a difficult romantic relationship and personal demons and still reeling from the death of her mother, Strayed navigates the challenging walk with very little hiking experience. In spite of her shortcomings, the journey changes the course of her life forever.
'Crying in H Mart' by Michelle Zauner in H Mart: A Memoir
Known as the lead singer of Japanese Breakfast , Michelle Zauner's biography is an exploration of family, food, identity, loss, and the journey to discovering oneself. From her childhood in Oregon to her experiences staying in Seoul, South Korea, with her grandmother, Zauner examines the strands that form her identity as a Korean American. In addition to tracking her career as a rock musician, Zauner opens up about the devastating family diagnosis that changed her outlook on life and heritage.
'I Came All This Way to Meet You: Writing Myself Home' by Jami Attenberg
Author Jami Attenberg is known for her novels The Middlesteins and The Melting Season, and for short story collections such as Instant Love . In I Came All This Way to Meet You, Attenberg shares the experiences that shaped her worldview, including following her father's occupation as a traveling salesman. As Attenberg discovered her own creative identity, she also found the less glamorous aspects of writing, such as the cross-country book tours and the lack of stable housing. Despite the challenges, Attenberg's memoir provides the encouragement needed to never quit, whatever the project.
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Alexei Navalny’s memoir due to be published posthumously in October
The Russian opposition politician, who died in prison in February, completed an autobiography which will come out later this year
A memoir by the late Russian politician Alexei Navalny is due to be published this autumn, publisher Penguin Random House (PRH) has announced.
The Russian opposition leader and pro-democracy campaigner began writing his book, titled Patriot, shortly after his poisoning in 2020. He completed it before he died in prison in 2024, dictating some parts.
His widow, Yulia Navalnaya, has been working with editors to bring the book to publication. She described it as “a testament not only to Alexei’s life, but to his unwavering commitment to the fight against dictatorship – a fight he gave everything for, including his life.” She hopes that readers will “come to know the man [she] loved deeply – a man of profound integrity and unyielding courage.”
“Sharing his story will not only honour his memory but also inspire others to stand up for what is right and to never lose sight of the values that truly matter”, she added.
Patriot is Navalny’s only memoir, and covers his early life through to his marriage, political career and activism. The book “expresses Navalny’s total conviction that change cannot be resisted and will come”, according to Vintage, the division of PRH that is publishing Patriot in the UK.
“In vivid, page-turning detail, including never-before-seen correspondence from prison, Navalny recounts, among other things … the many attempts on his life, and on the lives of the people closest to him, and the relentless campaign he and his team waged against an increasingly dictatorial regime”, the publisher added.
Navalny, who began his career as a lawyer, went on to become Russia’s most prominent anti-government campaigner and President Vladimir Putin’s fiercest critic. He was founder of the Anti-Corruption Foundation and was awarded the European Union’s Sakharov prize for “individuals, groups and organisations that have made an outstanding contribution to protecting freedom of thought” in 2021.
In 2013 and 2014 Navalny received suspended sentences for embezzlement, charges he said were fabricated to thwart his political ambitions. He ran in the 2013 Moscow mayoral election and came in second with 27% of the vote but was barred from running in the 2018 presidential election. In August 2020, he was sent to a hospital in Berlin after being poisoned with a Novichok nerve agent. Navalny accused Putin of being responsible for his poisoning.
In 2021, he returned to Russia and was detained on accusations of violating parole conditions while in Germany. In 2022, he was sentenced to nine years in a maximum security penal colony after being found guilty of large-scale fraud and contempt, in a trial described as a sham by Amnesty International. In August 2023, he was sentenced to an additional 19 years in prison. On 16 February 2024, the Russian prison service reported that Navalny had died at the age of 47 .
Patriots by Alexie Navalny (Vintage Publishing, £25). To support The Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com . Delivery charges may apply.
- Alexei Navalny
- Autobiography and memoir
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50 books to read before you die
Posted: April 15, 2023 | Last updated: August 2, 2023
So many books, so little time. What’s a book lover to do but write a book bucket list? Here’s a list of 50 must-read books, in alphabetical order, by 50 different authors. You’ll find many popular books, plus a few that may be new to you. Peruse our list and create your own!
“1984,” George Orwell
1984 is a dystopian novella set in a totalitarian state where everyone is under constant government surveillance. Winston Smith, a low-ranking member of “the Party,” starts keeping a diary of his secret thoughts—a forbidden act known as “thoughtcrime.” He and his lover, Julia, set out on a quest for freedom and justice. With its themes of propaganda, government control, technology, language, and psychological manipulation, 1984 sounds a warning that remains deeply relevant today.
First published: 1949
“A Christmas Carol,” Charles Dickens
Looking for the perfect book to curl up with over the Christmas holidays? Look no further than A Christmas Carol , an overnight success in its time and a perennial favourite ever since. On a cold Christmas Eve in Victorian-era London, miserly Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by four apparitions: the ghost of his deceased business partner, Jacob Marley, followed by the ghosts of Christmas Past, Christmas Present, and Christmas Yet to Come. After journeying with the ghosts through time, Scrooge sees the error of his ways and is transformed into a generous, warmhearted person.
First published: 1843
“A Fine Balance,” Rohinton Mistry
Written by Indian-born Canadian author Rohinton Mistry, A Fine Balance tells the story of four ordinary people struggling to get by in 1970s India during a time of national crisis. Dina, a 40-something widow, rents rooms in her house to Maneck, a naive college student, and two tailors, Ishvar and his nephew Om, who are “untouchables,” or members of India’s lowest caste. Their lives intersect in a sweeping tale that reveals the strength of the human will to survive even in harrowing circumstances. The novel won the 1995 Giller Prize and was selected for Oprah’s Book Club.
First published: 1995
“A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,” Betty Smith
In simple, poignant prose, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn tells the story of Francie Nolan, an imaginative child who loves to read, as she grows up in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in the early 1900s. The novel deals with typical coming-of-age themes such as making friends, first love, and burgeoning sexuality, but it also deals with darker issues like alcoholism, death, and poverty. It’s a heartwarming story of a clever young girl’s determination to make something of herself despite her modest beginnings.
First published: 1943
“Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” Lewis Carroll
One of the most popular and beloved books ever written, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is an absolute must-read. It tells the story of a young girl called Alice who follows the White Rabbit down a hole into a fantasy world—one populated with strange creatures such as the Cheshire Cat, the March Hare, the Mad Hatter, the hookah-smoking Caterpillar, and of course, the villainous Queen of Hearts. It has inspired countless adaptations, from movies and TV shows to theatrical plays and animated films.
First published: 1865
“Angela’s Ashes,” Frank McCourt
McCourt’s first memoir, Angela’s Ashes describes the author’s early childhood, first in Brooklyn, New York, and then in the slums of Limerick, Ireland, where his family endured poverty, illness, and the death of three children. McCourt’s alcoholic father, Malachy, rarely worked, leaving his mother, Angela, to beg from churches and charities. The brilliance of this memoir is McCourt’s ability to make even the most miserable situations shine with love and humour.
First published: 1996
“Annie John,” Jamaica Kincaid
Kincaid’s first novel, Annie John , details the inner thoughts and feelings of a girl growing up in Antigua, with focus on her intense, mercurial relationship with her mother. When Annie John goes through puberty, she becomes disenchanted with her mother, and her affection is transferred to her best friend, Gwen, and the wild “Red Girl.”
First published: 1985
“The Autobiography of Malcolm X,” as told to Alex Haley
The Autobiography of Malcolm X tells the story of Malcolm X’s life from street hustler and drug dealer, to Muslim minister and influential organizer for the Nation of Islam, to human rights activist and martyr. Malcolm X was unafraid to challenge even his deepest beliefs in order to become a better person and leader. His life story is accessible and profoundly inspiring.
First published: 1965
“The Bell Jar,” Sylvia Plath
Based on poet Sylvia Plath’s real-life experiences, The Bell Jar is told from the perspective of Esther Greenwood, an American college student who wins a summer internship at a New York City women’s magazine. Returning home after the internship to live with her mother in suburban Boston, Esther becomes increasingly depressed, eventually attempting to end her life, after which she is institutionalized. The novel was published one month before Plath killed herself and is highly regarded for its frank depiction of a young woman’s experience of mental illness.
First published: 1963
“Beloved,” Toni Morrison
Toni Morrison’s Pulitzer Prize–winning novel, Beloved , examines slavery and its traumatic aftermath. Set in rural Ohio after the Civil War, the novel chronicles the life of Sethe, a black woman who escaped from slavery. Sethe’s house in Ohio is haunted by the ghost of her baby, whose tombstone is marked with a single word: Beloved . Through a series of flashbacks, the reader follows Sethe from her time as a slave on a plantation called Sweet Home in Kentucky to her escape and the event that caused the death of her daughter.
First published: 1987
“Black Boy,” Richard Wright
Black Boy is a coming-of-age memoir by Richard Wright. The first part, “Southern Night,” details the hardships of his childhood in the American South while the second part, “The Horror and the Glory,” recounts his adult years in Chicago as a Communist Party member and burgeoning writer. With its vivid scenes and searing prose, Black Boy brings to life the racism, poverty, and fear that countless African-Americans endured in the decades before the civil rights movement.
First published: 1945
“Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” Truman Capote
You might be familiar with the 1961 movie Breakfast at Tiffany’s , starring Audrey Hepburn, but did you know that it was based on a book? Capote’s novella tells the story of Holly Golightly, a Manhattan party girl with a mysterious past. Holly doesn’t have a job: she gets by socializing with wealthy men and delivering messages for a gangster in Sing Sing prison. She naively hopes to marry a rich man and live a life of luxury. The story is told from the point of view of an unnamed narrator, who lives in the same New York City apartment building as Holly.
First published: 1958
“The Catcher in the Rye,” J.D. Salinger
The Catcher in the Rye is an American classic of teenage angst and rebellion. It recounts a slice in the life of Holden Caulfield, a 16-year-old boy who has just been expelled from a school called Pencey Prep. Holden explores New York City for three days before the Christmas holidays. The novel is written in a casual, conversational style that makes the reader feel they’re in dialogue with the narrator.
First published: 1951
“The Diary of a Young Girl,” Anne Frank
In 1942, when Holland was occupied by Nazi Germany, a 13-year-old Jewish girl named Anne Frank and seven other people (including her immediate family) fled their homes and hid in the “Secret Annex” of an old office building. Anne—whose life eventually came to a tragic end in a German concentration camp—kept a diary of her time in hiding, sharing her inner thoughts, desires, fears, and dreams for the future. The Diary of a Young Girl was originally written in Dutch and has been translated into over 70 languages.
First published: 1947
“Fierce Attachments: A Memoir,” Vivian Gornick
Selected by The New York Times as the best memoir of the past 50 years, Fierce Attachments: A Memoir focuses on Gornick’s volatile relationship with her mother. When Gornick’s father died young, her mother fell into a long-term depression. The memoir is an unflinchingly honest portrait of the inner drama of a mother-daughter bond.
“The Fire Next Time,” James Baldwin
Written by African-American author James Baldwin during the civil rights era, The Fire Next Time is a nonfiction book that examines racial injustice in the United States and the urgent need for constructive social change. In today’s increasingly divided political climate, where issues related to identity, race, gender, immigration, and economic inequality are at the forefront, Baldwin’s insights remain as relevant as ever.
“Frankenstein,” Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
Did you know that Mary Shelley was only 19 when she wrote Frankenstein , now considered a great classic of English literature? The novel tells the story of scientist Victor Frankenstein, who creates a hideous creature by sewing together and giving life to body parts from various corpses. Rejected by Victor and humanity in general, the monster is profoundly lonely and seeks revenge. Mary Shelley first wrote Frankenstein as a short story when the poet Lord Byron suggested that each of his friends write a thrilling tale as an entertaining challenge.
First published: 1818
“The Grapes of Wrath,” John Steinbeck
Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath takes place during the Great Depression. The Joads, a poor family of tenant farmers, are forced out of their Oklahoma farm and set out for California in search of a better life. On the road, they encounter great hardship. When they reach California, they find that things are not as rosy as they had hoped. The book, which won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, is considered an American classic.
First published: 1939
“The Handmaid’s Tale,” Margaret Atwood
Perhaps you’ve watched the popular TV series—but have you read the book it was based on? A dystopian classic, The Handmaid’s Tale is set in the near future in the fictional Republic of Gilead, a Christian fundamentalist state that was once part of the United States. The novel is narrated by Offred, a handmaid—that is, a woman who is forced to bear children for infertile women of higher social status. Written by Canadian author Margaret Atwood in the 1980s, The Handmaid’s Tale is as relevant as ever today: protestors around the world have dressed up as handmaids , donning white bonnets and red cloaks, to defend women’s reproductive rights.
“The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter,” Carson McCullers
McCullers was just 23 years old when The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter became an overnight literary sensation. The novel takes place in a Georgia mill town in the 1930s, and its protagonist is a deaf-mute man called John Singer. When John’s deaf-mute best friend, Spiros Antonapoulos, is committed to an insane asylum, John becomes a confidant for a motley crew of outsiders: Mick Kelly, a sensitive 13-year-old girl; Buff Brannon, the owner of an all-night café; Jake Blount, a radical drifter; and Benedict Copeland, a respected black doctor. In 2004, the novel was selected for Oprah’s Book Club.
First published: 1940
“The House of Mirth,” Edith Wharton
Set at the turn of the 20th century in New York, The House of Mirth follows Lily Bart, a beautiful, clever woman who knows how to use her feminine wiles. Time is running out for 29-year-old Lily to marry a rich man and secure a comfortable future. She was raised in a wealthy family, but to her misfortune, her father goes bankrupt soon after Lily makes her debut. Through a series of unfortunate incidents, Lily loses her position in upper-class society and her situation becomes increasingly desperate.
First published: 1905
“How to Build a Girl,” Caitlin Moran
The main character in How to Build a Girl , 14-year-old Johanna Morrigan, is chubby, weird, and totally uncool. She decides to recreate herself as Dolly Wilde, a hard-drinking rock journalist and Lady Sex Adventurer. Sounds like fun, right? The novel is loosely based on Moran’s own adolescent self, and her writing voice is like the best friend you wish you had—laugh-out-loud funny and thought-provoking all at once.
First published: 2014
“Howards End,” E.M. Forster
Widely considered Forster’s masterpiece, Howards End is set in Edwardian England and tells the story of three families: the wealthy and powerful Wilcoxes, the cultured and sensitive Schlegels, and the poor, working-class Basts. By writing about these three families and their interactions, Forster draws out themes of class struggle, the changing role of women, and country vs. city values. The novel inspired the beautiful 1992 romantic drama starring Anthony Hopkins, Helena Bonham Carter, and Emma Thompson.
First published: 1910
“I Am Malala,” Malala Yousafzai
Malala Yousafzai was 10 years old when the Taliban took over her home region of Swat Valley in Pakistan. The daughter of a school principal, she loved learning and spoke out against the Taliban’s prohibition of schooling for girls. On October 9, 2012, the then 15-year-old Malala was shot in the head at point-blank range by a Taliban gunman. Miraculously, she lived to tell her tale and has become a leader in the fight for children’s rights and education for girls. At the age of 17, Malala received the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize, making her the youngest Nobel laureate to date.
First published: 2013
“I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” Maya Angelou
The first of Angelou’s seven memoirs, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings recounts the author’s childhood and adolescence. Raised by her stern but loving grandmother in Stamps, Arkansas, young Maya experiences racism in her small Southern town. At the age of eight, she goes to live with her glamorous mother in San Francisco, California, where she is raped by her mother’s boyfriend. Despite these hardships, Angelou develops into an artistic, independent young woman.
First published: 1969
“Invisible Man,” Ralph Ellison
Winner of the 1953 National Book Award, Invisible Man is narrated by a nameless young black man who, upon moving from the segregated South to Harlem, New York City, is sorely disappointed to find that life is not much better up north. He is invisible because white people refuse to acknowledge his existence, his humanity. The novel is an existential examination of what it means to be socially and racially invisible.
First published: 1952
“Jane Eyre,” Charlotte Brontë
Originally published under the pen name Currer Bell, Jane Eyre has secured Charlotte Brontë’s position as one of the greatest Victorian novelists. Written in the first person, the novel follows Jane as she goes from being an orphan living with her cruel aunt, to a boarder and teacher at an awful school called Lowood, to a governess for the mysterious Mr. Rochester, whose house hides a terrible secret. In addition to being an exciting Gothic romance, Jane Eyre is considered a key text in the feminist canon.
First published: 1847
“Just Kids,” Patti Smith
Young and penniless but full of the desire to create, Patti Smith moved from New Jersey to New York City in 1967. There she met Robert Mapplethorpe, who was the same age as her and equally brimming with artistic ambition. Just Kids chronicles their development as artists in 1960s and 1970s downtown New York: Mapplethorpe’s rise to celebrated photographer and Smith’s path to becoming a prominent poet, visual artist, and highly influential figure in punk rock.
First published: 2010
“The Liar’s Club,” Mary Karr
Karr’s gutsy first memoir focuses on her troubled childhood in Texas and Colorado. She deftly walks the line between comedy and tragedy, describing incidents involving her hard-drinking father and mentally unstable mother, among other colourful characters. The book was a New York Times bestseller for over a year and is often credited with raising the art of the memoir to a new level.
“Little Women,” Louisa May Alcott
Originally published in two volumes, Little Women is one of the best-loved books of all time. The semi-autobiographical novel, set in New England during the Civil War, tells the sweet story of four sisters—Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy—who share a deep bond despite their different personalities and desires. The eighth film adaptation of the novel (December 2019) stars Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Timothée Chalamet, and Meryl Streep.
First published: 1868 and 1869
“Long Walk to Freedom,” Nelson Mandela
Long Walk to Freedom is an autobiography by South African president and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Nelson Mandela. With grace and wisdom, it details part of Mandela’s extraordinary life: his childhood, education, anti-apartheid activism, and 27-year imprisonment. It’s a tremendously inspiring read by one of the world’s greatest leaders.
First published: 1994
“Man’s Search for Meaning,” Viktor E. Frankl
Originally written in German, Man’s Search for Meaning is a powerful meditation on the deep-rooted human need for meaning. Drawing on his experiences as a prisoner in four Nazi concentration camps, Frankl explains how, even in the most terrible circumstances, one can find meaning in life. The celebrated Austrian psychiatrist is known for his development of logotherapy, which posits that meaning is a more fundamental human need than pleasure or power.
First published: 1946
“Maus,” Art Spiegelman
Originally serialized in the comic book Raw from 1980 to 1991, this remarkable tale was later published in two volumes: Maus I: My Father Bleeds History and Maus II: And Here My Troubles Began . It was the first graphic novel to win the Pulitzer Prize. Deftly mixing biography, memoir, and history with the comic book medium, Maus centres on how Spiegelman’s father survived living in concentration camps during the Holocaust.
First published: 1986 and 1991
“Middlemarch,” George Eliot
This magisterial Victorian novel, which explores issues related to the status of women, marriage, religion, political reform, and education, features a heroine who marries the wrong man and suffers for it, but still tries to be a good person. Middlemarch follows the intersecting lives of inhabitants in a small English town in the early 19th century. Author Mary Ann Evans used the pen name George Eliot because women writers were not taken seriously at the time.
First published: 1871–1872
“Mrs. Dalloway,” Virginia Woolf
Woolf’s fourth novel—a remarkable achievement that revolutionized modern literature—follows the title character, an upper-middle-class London housewife, through a single day in her life. The action in Mrs. Dalloway takes place mainly in the protagonist’s consciousness, a device that Woolf handles deftly to address themes of time, mental illness, gender, and sexuality.
First published: 1925
“No Pain Like This Body,” Harold Sonny Ladoo
Trinidadian-Canadian author Harold Sonny Ladoo is not well known, but his novel No Pain Like This Body is a marvel of Caribbean literature. A brutal tale of poverty and violence set in Trinidad, it centres on a family of rice growers. Reading this book is a visceral experience; Ladoo’s spare prose may seem naive at first, but its heart-rending power will stay with you long after you put the book down.
First published: 1972
“Persepolis,” Marjane Satrapi
Originally published in French in four volumes, Persepolis is a memoir in the form of a graphic novel. With great humour, Satrapi weaves a portrait of her childhood in Iran at the time of the Islamic Revolution, her adolescence alone in Europe (her parents sent her away for her own safety), and her eventual return to a changed Iran where she must follow rigid laws and social mores that curtail her personal and artistic freedom.
First published: 2000–2003
“Persuasion,” Jane Austen
Austen’s final novel, Persuasion , is her most mature and arguably her most romantic. When Anne Elliot is 19, she falls in love with and agrees to marry a dashing naval officer, Captain Wentworth, but her family persuades her to end the engagement because he has no fortune. Eight years later, when Anne has all but resigned herself to spinsterhood, the war ends and Captain Wentworth returns, giving the couple a second chance at love.
“The Picture of Dorian Gray,” Oscar Wilde
Wilde’s only novel is a Gothic and allegorical tale of a young man who sells his soul for eternal youth and beauty. When The Picture of Dorian Gray was first published in the July 1890 issue of Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine , it was met with widespread condemnation. In response to criticism, allusions to homoeroticism were censored. It was only many years after Wilde’s death that his imaginative and haunting novel became recognized as a classic.
First published: 1890
“The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” Muriel Spark
At the centre of this witty, slender novel about the dangers of power is an Edinburgh teacher and the six girls she holds in her thrall. Glamorous, outspoken, and charismatic, Jean Brodie wants the respect of her school’s staid administration, the perpetual adoration of her students, and the heart of one of her male colleagues—but can she have it all?
First published: 1961
“Rebecca,” Daphne du Maurier
Famously adapted for the screen by Alfred Hitchcock in 1940, Rebecca is a Gothic psychological thriller that chronicles a young bride’s obsession with her husband’s first wife, who drowned in a boating accident. Perhaps Du Maurier’s greatest achievement is her characterization of the sinister housekeeper, Mrs. Danvers, who does her best to drive the new wife mad.
First published: 1938
“The Remains of the Day,” Kazuo Ishiguro
This novel, which explores notions of duty, memory, love, and loss, is told in the first person by Stevens, an English butler who has dedicated his life to serving the late Lord Darlington. While driving to the West Country in a car borrowed from the new owner of Darlington Hall, Stevens retraces his life. The Remains of the Day won the 1989 Man Booker Prize for Fiction and was adapted into a magnificent film starring Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson.
First published: 1989
“Runaway,” Alice Munro
In her 10th collection , Nobel laureate Alice Munro offers readers eight finely crafted stories, three of which follow the same character, Juliet, at various points in her life. Munro has an uncanny ability to empathize with and portray people’s weaknesses and the motivations behind harmful behaviour, producing astoundingly realistic character portrayals.
First published: 2004
“The Spice-Box of Earth,” Leonard Cohen
You are probably familiar with Leonard Cohen’s music, but have you read his poetry? If not, The Spice-Box of Earth is a great place to start—it is accessible, sensual, and romantic. Cohen was only 27 and relatively unknown when the book was first published, and when the first edition sold out in less than three months, one reviewer called Cohen “probably the best young poet in English Canada right now.”
“Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Zora Neale Hurston
In Hurston’s best-known work, Janie Crawford, a light-skinned black woman in her early forties, recounts her three marriages to her best friend, Pheoby. The reader witnesses Janie’s development from wide-eyed teenager to strong, independent woman. Hurston’s use of African-American and Southern dialect throughout Their Eyes Were Watching God adds a layer of realism to the novel.
First published: 1937
“To Kill a Mockingbird,” Harper Lee
Lee famously stated that To Kill a Mockingbird was “a love story, pure and simple,” but it isn’t a romance—it’s a story of love for one’s family and community, and for doing the right thing. Narrated by a six-year-old tomboy nicknamed Scout, whose father, a lawyer, is defending a black man falsely accused of raping a white woman, the novel is a timeless plea for justice. It won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize and was later made into an Academy Award–winning movie.
First published: 1960
“Uncle Tungsten,” Oliver Sacks
Author of Awakenings and An Anthropologist on Mars , neurologist Oliver Sacks is famous for his bestselling medical case histories. This book, however, is a memoir of Sacks’s own childhood in London and the Midlands. Both of his parents were doctors, and they encouraged him to study science. Sacks had a special fascination for chemistry, setting up his own laboratory in the family home where he would perform experiments—the more dramatic, the better. Uncle Tungsten is a love letter to the field of chemistry and Sacks’s family, who fostered his intellectual curiosity.
First published: 2001
“The Warmth of Other Suns,” Isabel Wilkerson
In this extensively researched nonfiction book, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Wilkerson chronicles the “Great Migration”: the exodus of millions of Southern African-Americans to northern, midwestern, and western states. This epic story of migration within the United States is told through the life experiences of three individuals: Ida Mae Gladney, George Starling, and Robert Foster. The Warmth of Other Suns won numerous accolades, including the National Book Critics Circle Award.
“White Teeth,” Zadie Smith
This witty, lively debut—a smashing success with critics and readers alike—set in multicultural London deals with love, war, religion, and three different families over three generations. The story centres on an unlikely friendship between two WWII veterans: working-class Brit Archie Jones and Bengali Muslim Samad Iqbal. Just 24 when White Teeth was published, Smith apparently “ wrote the novel in quiet moments while revising for finals at Cambridge.”
First published: 2000
“Wuthering Heights,” Emily Brontë
Emily Brontë’s only novel tells the tortured love story of the foundling Heathcliff and his adoptive father’s daughter, Catherine Earnshaw. Bad boys abound in literature, but Heathcliff is a force of nature. When Catherine betrays him, he exacts revenge on everyone around her, including Catherine’s daughter. Will there ever be a stranger, darker romance? Wuthering Heights is a passionate exploration of the destructive power of spurned love that glitters through the centuries.
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Friends, Lovers and the Terrible Thing: A Memoir, by Matthew Perry. Perry, who played Chandler Bing on "Friends," has been candid about his substance abuse and sobriety. In this memoir, he ...
WINNER 51,361 votes. Crying in H Mart. by. Michelle Zauner. If it feels like this one was on display at every bookstore in 2021, that's because it pretty much was. Korean American author-musician Michelle Zauner—she of the indie rock initiative Japanese Breakfast—was one of publishing's biggest success stories this year.
Best autobiographies at a glance: Open, Andre Agassi | £10.99. Everything I Know About Love, Dolly Alderton | £10.99. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou | from £4.99. Wild Swans ...
15 Best New Autobiography Books To Read In 2024 - BookAuthority. A list of 15 new autobiography books you should read in 2024, such as Karma, Paris, Spare, Gloves Off and Autobiography.
WINNER 132,867 votes. The Woman in Me. by. Britney Spears. One of several high-profile celebrity memoirs to drop this year, Britney Spears' big book was ecstatically received by fans—and it did quite well with the critics, too. If you're keeping score at home, Prince Harry's memoir, Spare, came in second place in this category.
Here she offers us a tour of the five memoirs that made their 2024 shortlist. Interview by Cal Flyn, Deputy Editor. Winner 2024 National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography. How to Say Babylon: A Memoir. by Safiya Sinclair. 1 I Would Meet You Anywhere: A Memoir by Susan Kiyo Ito. 2 Secret Harvests: A Hidden Story of Separation and the ...
WINNER 202,606 votes. I'm Glad My Mom Died. by. Jennette McCurdy. Maybe the single biggest surprise success of the year, Jennette McCurdy's funny and heartbreaking memoir chronicles her years as a child performer ( iCarly) and her extremely complicated relationship with her mom. The book has been a massive success, with more than half a ...
If you're thinking of skipping it because you haven't connected with Bamford's work before: don't. Sure, I'll Join Your Cult: A Memoir of Mental Illness and the Quest to Belong Anywhere ...
5. Conundrum by Jan Morris: Best trans and gender dysphoria autobiography. Price: £8.57 | Buy now from Amazon. Jan Morris was born James Humphry Morris in Somerset in 1926, and died in Wales in ...
Five Books deputy editor Cal Flyn selects the best recent autobiographical writing in this round-up of notable memoirs of 2023—taking in new work from such literary giants as Janet Malcolm and Annie Ernaux, the writer other writers are raving about, and a humorous debut depicting life in a haunted antiquarian bookshop. 1 Stay True by Hua Hsu.
If you are the interviewee and would like to update your choice of books (or even just what you say about them) please email us at [email protected]. Best Biographies Best Nonfiction Books of 2022 The Best Books of 2022 The Best Memoirs and Autobiographies Book Awards NBCC shortlists. Marion Winik. The best recent memoirs: the finalists for ...
by Luiz Schwarcz. A literary sensation in Brazil, Luiz Schwarcz's brave and tender memoir interrogates his ordeal of bipolar disorder in the context of a family story of murder, dispossession, and silence—the long echo of the Holocaust across generations. Add to Bookshelf. Paperback.
Broom's award-winning debut, The Yellow House (Corsair), is a history of a house, a family and a neighbourhood brought low by neglect, racism and inequality. The youngest of 12 children, she had ...
Unbound. By Tarana Burke. In this powerful new autobiography, Tarana Burke - the activist who founded the Me Too movement - shares her story of struggle, strength, and advocacy. Burke bravely chronicles her life story, documenting the sexual abuse she suffered as a child and the inspiration she found in supporting young Black and brown girls.
Via Bookshop.org. 1. Begin Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own by Eddie S. Glaude (2020) In these tumultuous times, average citizens and leaders alike have been ...
Reading an autobiography can offer a unique insight into a world and experience very different from your own - and these real-life stories are even more entertaining, and stranger, than fiction.Take a glimpse into the lives of some of the world's most inspiring and successful celebrities, politicians and sports people and more in our edit of the best autobiographies and biographies to read ...
10 Best Biographies & Memoirs of 2023: Sure, I'll Join Your Cult by Maria Bamford. Once Upon a Tome by Oliver Darkshire. Larry McMurtry: A Life by Tracy Daugherty. The Art Thief by Michael Finkel. Leslie F*cking Jones by Leslie Jones. My Effin' Life by Geddy Lee.
Featured in 12 articles. 10 Best Motivational Autobiographies Everyone Should Read | Lifegram. lifegram.org. The 15 Best Autobiographies and Memoirs. mydomaine.com. Show All. Recommended by. Barack Obama Selena Gomez Oprah Winfrey Tyler Oakley Brene Brown Alexander Stubb Alice Korngold Leah Solivan. View on Amazon .
by Donald J. Robertson. Read expert recommendations. "In another Yale series, Ancient Lives, there's a new biography of the 2nd-century Roman emperor, Marcus Aurelius, whose book, Meditations, is often recommended for those interested in the ancient philosophy of Stoicism. It's by Donald Robertson, a cognitive behavioural psychotherapist ...
New Releases: Biography & Memoir. 248 Results. Bound Feet & Western Dress. Pang-Mei Natasha Chang. Every Living Thing. Jason Roberts.
The Best 10 Biographies by Women to Add to Your Reading List From former first ladies to famous actors and standup comedians. By Amy Mackelden Published: Mar 27, 2024
Autobiography. An autobiography (from the Greek, αὐτός-autos self + βίος-bios life + γράφειν-graphein to write) is a book about the life of a person, written by that person. Closely associated with autobiography (and sometimes difficult to precisely distinguish from it) is the form of memoir.
Books Alexei Navalny's memoir due to be published posthumously in October The Russian opposition politician, who died in prison in February, completed an autobiography which will come out later ...
Here's a list of 50 must-read books, in alphabetical order, by 50 different authors. You'll find many popular books, plus a few that may be new to you. Peruse our list and create your own!
145 books based on 41 votes: Angela's Ashes by Frank McCourt, Love Life by Rob Lowe, The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank, Open by Andre Agassi, Born ...
A list of 5 new welsh biography ebooks you should read in 2024, such as Mr Jones, Brittle With Relics and The History of Wales.