
We all have a story to tell...
Join us this month in celebrating National Write Down Your Story Day through this collection of memoirs & stories from people around the world!
Start writing your own story with the help of these books on the writing essentials!
A Braided Card
by
Mary Gaver
The author, former president of the New Jersey Library Association, the American Association of School Librarians, and the American Library Association, discusses her career and shares her opinions on issues in librarianship.
Interrupted Life
by
Ruby Tapia; Paula C. Johnson; Rickie Solinger; Martha L. Raimon; Tina Reynolds
Interrupted Life is a gripping collection of writings by and about imprisoned women in the United States, a country that jails a larger percentage of its population than any other nation in the world. This eye-opening work brings together scores of voices from both inside and outside the prison system including incarcerated and previously incarcerated women, their advocates and allies, abolitionists, academics, and other analysts. In vivid, often highly personal essays, poems, stories, reports, and manifestos, they offer an unprecedented view of the realities of women's experiences as they try to sustain relations with children and family on the outside, struggle for healthcare, fight to define and achieve basic rights, deal with irrational sentencing systems, remake life after prison; and more. Together, these powerful writings are an intense and visceral examination of life behind bars for women, and, taken together, they underscore the failures of imagination and policy that have too often underwritten our current prison system.
Memoirs Found in a Bathtub
by
Stanislaw Lem
The year is 3149, and a vast paper destroying blight-papyralysis-has obliterated much of the planet's written history. However, these rare memoirs, preserved for centuries in a volcanic rock, record the strange life of a man trapped in a hermetically sealed underground community. Translated by Michael Kandel and Christine Rose.
Black Plume
by
David Madsen
The master of the macabre is back. A fictional memoir told in Edgar Allan Poe's own literary style, "Black Plume" recreates in vivid detail Poe's strange marriage to his child-bride, his struggle to make a living, his addiction to alcohol and his agonizing battle against the sensuality of his nature.
Childtimes
by
Eloise Greenfield; Lessie J. Little; Jerry Pinkney (Illustrator)
Three generations of African-American women remember their "childtimes" in this lyrical memoir spanning a century of American history. This book preserves the lives and communities of times past for future generations.
Complete with a family tree, photos from the authors' family albums, and drawings by Caldecott Medal-winning illustrator Jerry Pinkney, Eloise Greenfield and Lessie Jones Little's Childtimes beautifully captures the experiences of grandmother, mother, and daughter as they recall moments from their childhood.
Holocaust Memoirs
by
Joachim Schoenfeld
Memoirs of a Holocaust survivor; continues his "Shtetl Memoirs". In September 1939, when the Germans were advancing to Warsaw, Schoenfeld and his family left the city and fled to his native Eastern Galicia.