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autobiographical and memoir
In October 2006, Andy Summers released One Train Later, an autobiographical memoir detailing his early career and time with the band.
Kovalevskaya wrote several non-mathematical works as well, including a memoir, A Russian Childhood, plays ( in collaboration with Duchess Anne Charlotte Edgren-Leffler ) and a partly autobiographical novel, Nihilist Girl ( 1890 ).
Cavendish published her autobiographical memoir A True Relation of my Birth, Breeding, and Life as an addendum to her collection Natures Pictures Drawn by Fancies Pencil to the Life in 1656.
* Elie Wiesel, Night ( 1958 ), sometimes considered an autobiographical novel although classified as a memoir by the author.
It is prominently featured on the cover of the 2010 autobiographical memoir Hannah's Child, by Stanley Hauerwas, a Methodist theologian teaching at Duke Divinity School.
Memoir is autobiographical writing, but not all autobiographical writing follows the criteria for memoir set out below.
The story is narrated in the first person as an autobiographical memoir told by the titular horse named Black Beauty — beginning with his carefree days as a colt on an English farm with his mother, to his difficult life pulling cabs in London, to his happy retirement in the country.
Gary Weissman writes that it has been called a novel, autobiography, autobiographical novel, non-fictional novel, semi-fictional memoir, fictional-autobiographical novel, fictionalized autobiographical memoir, and memoir-novel.
It is not exactly a " memoir ", as Philip Hitti translated the title, although it does include many autobiographical details that are incidental to the main point.
According to his autobiographical memoir, Boutwell was raised on his family's farm and attended public school until the age of seventeen.
Edward Harrison Taylor's autobiographical memoir Edward H. Taylor: Recollection of an Herpetologist was published by the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History in 1975 Series, Publication 4: 1-160 with contributions from A. Byron Leonard, Hobart M. Smith and George R. Pisani.
After his retirement from active broadcasting he moved to Knoxville, Tennessee to an apartment across the Tennessee River from the University of Tennessee campus from which he had a view of Neyland Stadium, the Volunteers ' home field, and wrote an autobiographical memoir entitled Hello Everybody, I'm Lindsey Nelson, his landmark opening phrase.
He has written an autobiographical memoir, Stanley I Presume, which was published in March 2009.
His exploits are known through the posthumous publication of his memoir Pilgrimage () in 1614, an autobiographical work whose truthfulness is nearly impossible to assess.
Her nickname as a child was Totto-chan, according to her 1981 autobiographical memoir.
Memoirs Of An Exile ( Turkish title: Bir Sürgünün Hatıraları ) is an autobiographical memoir by Turkish writer Aziz Nesin about his exile to Bursa, republished in 2001 by Southmoor Studios, in English language translation by Joseph S. Jacobson.
In late 2006, Anand Tucker used certain parts of Cromford, including its historic bookshop, for his film And When Did You Last See Your Father ?, based on the autobiographical memoir by poet Blake Morrison.
The 1998 documentary film Party Monster: The Shockumentary and the 2003 feature film Party Monster – both directed by Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato – were based upon the memoir Disco Bloodbath by Club Kid James St. James, an autobiographical recount of his life.
Other works include the short story collection A Companion Volume ( 1923 ), the autobiographical novel Post-Adolescence ( 1923 ), Distinguished Air ( Grim Fairy Tales ) ( 1925 ), the poetry collections The Portrait of a Generation ( 1926 ) and Not Alone Lost ( 1937 ), the 1, 200 line epic poem North America, Continent of Conjecture ( 1929 ), and his memoir Being Geniuses Together: An Autobiography ( 1938 ).
' Distorted views of Charcot as harsh and tyrannical have arisen from some sources that mistakenly identify Munthe as Charcot's assistant and take Munthe's autobiographical novel as a factual memoir.

autobiographical and unpublished
He worked for years on his 1000-page autobiographical novel, The Education of Albie Snow, but the three-volume work remains unpublished.
Yet, a nearly autobiographical story of Muziano written by his confessor ( unpublished until 1954 ) indicates instead that Muziano was born in Brescia, and left this town as a young man, and that his first apprenticeship was under Domenico Campagnola and Lambert Sustris in 1544 – 46 in the town of Padua.
* John Dunmore Lang, Reminiscences of My Life and Times, Both in Church and State in Australia, for Upwards of Fifty Years, an autobiographical manuscript, unpublished in Lang's lifetime.
Further unpublished poems from a handwritten notebook, were published in The Tears of War ( 2000 ) by her great-niece Charlotte Fyfe, which also tells the story of her love affair with Bevil Quiller-Couch through autobiographical extracts, and the letters from Bevil to May.
A further collection of autobiographical material, 1932 – 42, continuing his memoirs, remains unpublished and is in the possession of his descendants.
According to a brief, unpublished autobiographical account, while still a child she moved to Oxford County, Upper Canada, where eventually she worked as a district school teacher for a few years.

autobiographical and lifetime
Abbey's first novel, Jonathan Troy ( 1954 ), is set entirely in a thinly disguised Indiana, and his novel The Fool's Progress ( 1988 ), which he called his " fat masterpiece ", is an autobiographical account of his growing up in this area and his imagined attempt to return home after a lifetime spent mostly in the desert Southwest.
Throughout one ’ s lifetime, mild cognitive impairments ( MCIs ) may develop such as errors in episodic memory ( autobiographical memory about people, places, and their contex ), and working memory ( the active processing component of STM ) due to damage in hippocampal and association cortical areas.
In an autobiographical talk given at Yale in 2002, " The Curious Misuse of a Yale Education ", Boynton refers to her book Grunt ( an illuminated book and recording of plainchant in Latin and Pig Latin ) as " the culmination of a lifetime spent joyfully squandering an expensive education on producing works of no apparent significance ".
" " Over the following decade he wrote sketches and stories, and two autobiographical novellas, none of which was published in his lifetime.

autobiographical and accounts
Victims and opponents of totalitarian regimes have been able to present striking critiques of these regimes through autobiographical accounts of their oppression.
Some published oral or written autobiographical narratives are considered " testimonial literature " particularly when they present evidence or first person accounts of human rights abuses, violence and war, and living under conditions of social oppression.
She specialised in reviewing autobiographical and biographical accounts as well as the occasional novel.
With encouragement and assistance from Jacquie, and advice from elder brother Lawrence, Gerald Durrell started writing humorous autobiographical accounts to raise money, initially because he and Jacquie were broke after their wedding and Durrell didn't have a source of income, and then later to fund his expeditions and conservation efforts.
His book Historiska Skrifter is mainly autobiographical, but its historical accounts are often biased.
Over the years, Barger has posted a number of autobiographical accounts.
Pioneer Women: Voices from the Kansas Frontier ( 1982 ), autobiographical accounts excerpt and text search
The recently discovered circumstances of the marriages of the brothers have disposed of the idea that the romance is autobiographical in its main idea, but some of the episodes are said to be but slightly veiled accounts of the adventures of Henry IV.
Jacobs's autobiographical accounts were first published in serial form in the New York Tribune, a newspaper owned and edited by abolitionist Horace Greeley.
His autobiographical works But to What Purpose: The Autobiography of a Contemporary ( 1946 ) and Journey Under the Southern Stars ( 1968 ) give vivid accounts of his physical and intellectual journeys.
Poe may have used these real-life accounts in an attempt to hoax his readers into believing the novel was an autobiographical narrative by Pym.
Testimonial literature is then defined within the boundaries of autobiographical accounts, documentary narratives, eyewitness reports, and oral histories that are later transcribed into a literary format.
Her books Dead Man Walking and The Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account to Wrongful Executions are autobiographical accounts of the time she spent ministering to death row inmates.
Twain outlined a plan in 1899 for an autobiographical work which was to be published ( according to different accounts of the episode ) either " 100 years from now " or " 100 years after his death.
In her Women on the Margins ( 1995 ), she looked at the autobiographical accounts of three 17th-century women — the Jewish merchant Glikl Hamel, the Catholic nun Marie de l ’ Incarnation, who came to New France, and the Protestant entomologist-artist Maria Sibylla Merian — and discussed the role of religion in their lives.
Frequently, Raban ’ s autobiographical accounts of journeys taken mirror transformations in his own life or the world at large: Old Glory takes place during the buildup to Ronald Reagan ’ s victory in the 1980 presidential election, Coasting as the Falklands War begins, and Passage to Juneau as the failure of the author ’ s marriage becomes apparent.
" Ironically, the accuracy of many newspaper and autobiographical accounts used to follow the early life of Samuel Clemens are in doubt.
Francis Stuart's time with with Iseult may not have been an entirely happy time ; from the accounts given in his apparently autobiographical novels, both he and his wife struggled with personal demons and their internal anguish poisoned their marriage.
Cytowic describes how an article about his work on synesthesia in the tabloid The National Enquirer, which are " not known to help one's career " led to his first contacts with synesthetes beyond MW These personal accounts of synesthesia, described here in more autobiographical style, also form the basis of Cytowic's more detailed scientific book, Synesthesia: A Union of the Senses.
The thorough recount of the interiority of this space “ shows the apartment ( in a manner of a television program ), providing autobiographical accounts of associations with furnishings ”.
Several of his books were autobiographical accounts of the adventures of Anderson, his wife, Dortha, and their children, Ann, Scott and Holly.

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