Author Memoir Reading List and Book Club

I love reading craft technique books, but I am getting to that point where they don’t go as far as they used to. I follow several writers, authors, and creative thinkers who all have a habit of reading creator or author memoirs. What the method does is teach you how to think like a novelist and incorporate practices and habits that go beyond simple techniques to tell a good story.

The way authors create and think is a technique in itself. When I explain a story idea’s life and creation to another writer and vice versa, there’s always small amazement how the connections happen.

When most people talk about author memoirs or craft memoirs, they always talk about On Writing by Stephen King. It’s a short book that talks about the rise of the King of Horror and what he’s learned along the way. The problem is, King thinks like a basic white guy. There aren’t many “revelations” or knockout moments in the book.

That isn’t to say the book isn’t a thrill to read, like all accounts of a writer making it big—it’s inspiring, but it’s not helpful. A part of me thinks it’s because he tried to make it helpful without thinking about the people he was and would be helping.

But what do I know?

Well, I know what I liked and what helped me:

The craft memoir that helped me the way On Writing is portrayed as helping others was Charles Johnston’s Way of the Writer. That taught me how to LIVE as a writer. There were craft techniques embedded, but more than anything it talked about how to be a decent person and writer while making your life in a creative world.

I highly recommend this book to any type of writer, whether blogger, novelist, teacher, reporter, etc.

The Writing Skins Author Memoir Book Club

Have you wanted a low pressure book club that exposes you to new authors and thinkers? Is there any part of you that’s always wanted to know how Murakami wound up those birds? Or how Bradbury illustrated a man while crafting a whole country for October??

Let’s explore these writers and more and how they crafted their careers, novels, and characters. Us together, reading through the lives of authors we love, hate, and admire. Then talking about what fascinated us, what changed us. This bookclub is organized on my Writing Skins newsletter. To join it, please subscribe!

My hope is that together we can learn and discuss some fun and interesting things about authors who have written stories we love or hated. And maybe it’ll help me and some people see the world in a new way.

The list of memoirs so far:

  1. Write Away by Elizabeth George
  2. I, Asimov by Issac Asimov
  3. In Memory Yet Green by Issac Asimov
  4. In Joy Still Felt by Issac Asimov
  5. Novelist as a Vocation by Haruki Murakami
  6. Books by Larry McMurty
  7. Sailor and Fiddler by Herman Wouk
  8. The Writing Life by Annie Dillard
  9. The Motion of Light in Water by Samuel R Delaney
  10. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
  11. A Writer’s Diary by Virginia Woolf
  12. Opposite of Fate by Amy Tan
  13. Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath by Sylvia Plath
  14. Tibetan Peach Pie by Tom Robbins
  15. A Life in Letters by Zora Neale Houston
  16. Conversations with Octavia Butler
  17. 42: The Wildly Improbable Ideas of Douglas Adams By: Douglas Adams
  18. A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
  19. What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami
  20. Listen to the Echoes by Ray Bradbury
  21. Bradbury Speaks by Ray Bradbury
  22. The Successful Novelist by David Morrell
  23. Wish I Was Here by M John Harrison
  24. Working Days by John Steinbeck
  25. Conversations on Writing by Ursula K Le Guin
  26. It Came from Ohio by RL Stine
  27. Fun Home by Alison Bechdel
  28. The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl by Issa Rae
  29. Poet Warrior by Joy Harjo
  30. Travels with Charley: In Search of Americaby John Steinbeck

My personal plan is to read all 30 of these books between 2024 and 2025, but I figured I’d keep things manageable by us only reading 12 of those together. One book a month for the year of 2024. One book to show us something new.

So, before we start, I want to hear from the people interested in joining. How does this reading list sound? Are there authors or books you’re especially interested in reading?

Is there a writer’s memoir you want to include?

Let me know in the comments or by responding to this email!


If you’re interested in joining the author memoir book club, signup for a monthly or yearly subscription to my author newsletter Writing Skins.

2 thoughts on “Author Memoir Reading List and Book Club

  1. I have been wanting to join a book club. One for writers memoirs sounds great! I haven’t actually read a lot of them. I often end up reading ones that are tangentially abt writing, but the authors would describe themselves differently.

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