Autobiography
Definition (per LCSH web site): "An account of a person's life written by its subject, usually in the form of a continuous narrative of events considered by the author to be the most important or interesting, selected from those he or she is willing to reveal. Contemporary autobiographies of famous people are often written with the assistance of a ghost writer. An autobiography differs from a diary or journal in being written for others rather than for purely private reasons.
See also: confessions; confessions: An autobiography in which the author discloses personal feelings and private matters, usually with a spiritual, intellectual, or theoretical purpose; memoirs: A narrative of events or reminiscences based on the author's own observations or personal knowledge of the world in which he (or she) lived, including events witnessed, people known or observed, places visited, etc. The life need not have been historically significant but one that placed the writer in a position to observe firsthand significant events as they unfolded. Unlike a private diary or journal, memoirs are usually written for publication long after the occurrence of the events described and do not necessarily provide a day-to-day account.)"
For material that covers the writing methods for autobiographies, use Autobiography (Topical subject: sh85010050).
Found in 8 Collections and/or Records:
Arthur A. Kimball Collection
This collection contains photographs, correspondence, pamphlets, interviews, and an unpublished autobiography relating to life and carrer of civil servant Arthur A. Kimball. Materials cover a range of subjects from Kimball's service at the Nuremberg Trials to various space exploration missions.
For the Record: From Wall Street to Washington, 1988, 1988
I Kept No Diary: 60 Years with Marine Diesels, Automobile and Aero Engines, 1978, 1978
Jet: The Story of a Pioneer, 1953, 1953
Jet: The Story of a Pioneer, 1954
Memories and Machines: The Pattern of My Life, 1968, 1990
There's Something In The Air [Second Printing], 1943, 1943-06
Document Type: Book (Informational).
Purpose: Informational.
Authority: Author Expertise.
Scope: This memoir, writtien by Flying Officer H. E. Bates of the Royal Air Force, relates his experiences flying during World War II. He originally wrote this book under the pseudonym "Flying Officer X," likely so it couldn't be used against him if he was shot down and captured.
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