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  • How to Write an Autobiography. Committing your life story to paper doesn't have to end

  • in a book deal to be considered successful. What really matters is the insight you gain

  • along the way. You will need Memories Notes Theme Conversations with loved ones and honesty.

  • Step 1. Jot down the memories that remain most vivid in your mind -- even if they don't

  • seem significant. Chances are if you've remembered them all this time, they are the memories

  • that are most meaningful to you. Step 2. Review your notes to see if there is a theme to your

  • memories. Many autobiographies have one. Step 3. Figure out how you want to organize your

  • story. You don't have to start at the beginning; you launch the book with a defining event,

  • or even start with the present, and then go back in time. Or organize your life story

  • according to themes. Step 4. Talk to friends and family members to fill in memory gaps

  • and to gain different perspectives on your experiences. Be aware that the stories you

  • include about others could adversely affect your relationship with them. Consider changing

  • their names to protect their identities. Step 5. Once you start writing, write descriptively.

  • Don't just chronicle the major events in your life; transport the reader with vivid accounts

  • of how everything looked, smelled, felt, and sounded. Include dialogue: Snippets of conversations

  • can really make memories come alive. Step 6. Above all, be honest. An autobiography

  • won't ring true to your readers -- or be cathartic for you -- if you don't bare your soul. Did

  • you know Actress Drew Barrymore wrote her autobiography, Little Girl Lost, when she

  • was 14.

How to Write an Autobiography. Committing your life story to paper doesn't have to end

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