Case study: US educator Evelyn Kohl LaTorre on writing her interracial marriage memoir Love in Any Language

Case study: US educator Evelyn Kohl LaTorre on writing her interracial marriage memoir Love in Any Language. A young Evelyn wearing her wedding dress, 1966; book cover of Love in Any Language, She Writes Press; and a portrait photo of Evelyn. Photos Evelyn Kohl LaTorre, She Writes Press
Memoir Love in Any Language (centre) by Evelyn Kohl LaTorre (right), She Writes Press, and wearing her wedding dress, 1966 (left). Photos Evelyn Kohl LaTorre, She Writes Press

What a 1960s Peace Corps volunteer to Peru knows about interracial relationships, love and marriage

Evelyn Kohl LaTorre’s new memoir Love in Any Language is a beautiful account about the trials and joys of blending two cultures.

The book is available from September 28 through She Writes Press and follows on from Evelyn’s popular life story Between Inca Walls.

Between Inca Walls is about her Peace Corps trip to Peru in the 1960s and falling in love with University student Antonio.

But in Love in Any Language Evelyn writes about finding out she is pregnant at age 23, marrying and moving home to California.

Here she learns to juggle full-time work and parenthood while Antonio learns English, finishes college and finds a job.

Forever Young Autobiographies recently caught up with Evelyn to find out more about sitting down to write this latest book plus her top tips for fellow life-story creators …

Continue reading Case study: US educator Evelyn Kohl LaTorre on writing her interracial marriage memoir Love in Any Language

Case study: Englishman and West Ham fan Joe Morris on writing No Joe Bloggs

Case study: Englishman and West Ham fan Joe Morris on writing No Joe Bloggs. Book cover of No Joe Bloggs, Mirador Publishing, and a portrait photo of Morris. Photos Joe Morris and Mirador Publishing
Life story No Joe Bloggs (left) by Joe Morris (right), Mirador Publishing. Photos: Joe Morris and Mirador Publishing

Essex local discovers life-story writing flow after Autism diagnosis

No Joe Bloggs by Joe Morris should be an inspiration to those wondering if they can pen a life story.

Indeed Englishman Morris fell into his autobiography project while seeking medical care.

And being diagnosed with Autism certainly did not hold this writer back.

In short, his book ranges from affectionate childhood memories growing up at Ilford, Essex, to quirky tales of London life.

Plus there is a moving account of Morris’s family, who survived the Holocaust, among other lighter topics like England’s 1966 World Cup win.

Forever Young Autobiographies caught up with Morris to hear more about his life, writing the book and encouragement for fellow creators.

Continue reading Case study: Englishman and West Ham fan Joe Morris on writing No Joe Bloggs

Case study: French memoir Blown Out of Proportion by author Rachel Caldecott

Case study: French memoir Blown Out of Proportion by author Rachel Caldecott. A younger Caldecotte and her family when they first found their house in France; book cover of Blown Out of Proportion: Misadventures of a Glassblower in France; and a portrait photo of Caldecott. Photos Rachel Caldecott
Memoir Blown Out of Proportion: Misadventures of a Glassblower in France (centre) by Rachel Caldecott (right) and with her family (left) when they first found their house in France. Photos: Rachel Caldecott

An amazing story of love, glassblowing and one family’s gutsy move to France

Building writing confidence through experience was key to Rachel Caldecott publishing her memoir Blown Out of Proportion: Misadventures of a Glassblower in France.

Certainly Caldecott never expected to end up writing, despite coming from a ‘booky’ family that included a writer mother and publisher father.

Indeed as a youngster she was interested in “too many things” and assumed something else was waiting for her.

But, despite these doubts, Caldecott’s Blown Out of Proportion was published in April.

And it tells the tale of moving, with her husband Chris and their two young children, from the United Kingdom to southern France.

Here they establish a glassblowing studio in an impoverished, sleepy town while braving scorpion-filled hovels, eccentric locals, corrupt politicians and traumatic legal battles.

Forever Young Autobiographies caught up with Caldecott to find out more about her book, the creative process and her suggestions for fellow writers.

Continue reading Case study: French memoir Blown Out of Proportion by author Rachel Caldecott

Case study: American memoirist Karen Hill Anton and writing her award-winning The View From Breast Pocket Mountain

Case study: American memoirist Karen Hill Anton and writing her award-winning The View From Breast Pocket Mountain. A young Karen Hill Anton doing calligraphy; book cover of The View From Breast Pocket Mountain;  and a portrait photo of Anton. Photos Karen Hill Anton
Memoir The View From Breast Pocket Mountain (centre) by Karen Hill Anton (right), who is a skilled Japanese calligrapher (left). Photos: Karen Hill Anton

What The Japan Times columnist and skilled Japanese calligrapher knows about leading an adventurous life and living in Japan

Memoir writer Karen Hill Anton has certainly had one interesting life!

Firstly she grew up in New York City and hitch-hiked the length and breadth of Europe as a youngster in 1965.

Next, in 1974, she left the United States with her husband and daughter, 5, and drove a VW Beetle from Amsterdam to Afghanistan.

Indeed, the family was on the road, mostly camping, for a year before arriving in Japan.

“After our first year of studying yoga and martial arts under a tyrannical sensei, we settled in rural Japan,” Anton said.

“The province of Shizuoka, Japan’s premier green-tea growing region, is where I’ve made my home and raised my four bilingual-bicultural children.”

Anton’s acclaimed memoir The View From Breast Pocket Mountain has been awarded the Book Readers Appreciation Group (BRAG) medallion 2021 and the Self-Publishing Review Book Awards gold medal 2020.

And this week she shares with Forever Young Autobiographies readers more about the book, how it was created plus tips for new creators …

Continue reading Case study: American memoirist Karen Hill Anton and writing her award-winning The View From Breast Pocket Mountain

Case study: The Moonsamy family’s The 17th Suitcase: Vignettes from a South African Family

Case study: The Moonsamy family's The 17th Suitcase: Vignettes from a South African Family. Book cover The 17th Suitcase: Vignettes from a South African Family by Reverend Samuel Moonsamy and family, the 17 Moonsamy family members today, and a black-and-white photo of Rev. Sam and Sue Moonsamy with their young daughters Priscilla and Susheela. Photos by the Moonsamy family
The 17th Suitcase: Vignettes from a South African Family by Reverend Samuel Moonsamy and family (left), the 17 Moonsamy family members today (top), and an earlier photo of Rev. Sam and Sue Moonsamy with their daughters Priscilla and Susheela (below).
Photos by the Moonsamy family

The amazing story of how one family of Indian heritage survived life under apartheid and moved to America

This week’s case study is The 17th Suitcase: Vignettes from a South African Family, a fascinating compilation of life stories by Reverend Samuel Moonsamy and his family.

It tells how the family of Indian heritage, navigated the system of apartheid in South Africa – amid racial tension plus economic struggle – and settled in northern California, United States of America.

Certainly the book’s anecdotes are sometimes hilarious, sometimes serious and invariably thought provoking.

However, they ultimately aim to highlight a strong, faith-based legacy for future generations.

Recently Forever Young Autobiographies caught up with Priscilla, the eldest of Rev. Moonsamy’s six children.

And she explained more about the book, how it evolved plus offered helpful tips to those keen to sit down and record their own family stories …

Continue reading Case study: The Moonsamy family’s The 17th Suitcase: Vignettes from a South African Family

Case study: Solo travel memoir Untethered: A Woman’s Search for Self on the Edge of India

Case study: Solo travel memoir Untethered: A Woman’s Search for Self on the Edge of India. C. L. Stambush with her Royal Enfield Bullet motorcycle, India, 1997; book cover Untethered: A Woman’s Search for Self on the Edge of India – A Travel Memoir; and a portrait photo of Stambush. Photos by C. L. Stambush
C. L. Stambush with her Royal Enfield Bullet motorcycle, India, 1997 (left); Untethered: A Woman’s Search for Self on the Edge of India – A Travel Memoir (centre); and Stambush today (right). Photos by C. L. Stambush

The amazing travel story of a motorbike trip from New Delhi to find the Hindu goddess Kali

Get ready for a wild ride with C. L. Stambush in this latest case study about her bold and honest self-published book Untethered: A Woman’s Search for Self on the Edge of India – A Travel Memoir.

The life story tells of her five-month, nearly 7000-mile (11,265km) solo journey in 1997 as a young woman on a Royal Enfield Bullet motorcycle and her quest to prove to herself she “can go anywhere, do anything, be anyone”.

Indeed Stambush had never ridden a motorbike and named her Bullet Kali after the badass Hindu goddess of rebirth, hoping to gain some grrrr. 

But her mission was to discover the 51 Hindu shakti peetha temples, containing pieces of the goddess — lips, wrists, heart — believed to possess the power to transform.

However, along the way Stambush was reshaped as she encountered friendly families and ominous men, confronted culture clashes, hijras, and bandits, experienced monsoons, scorching deserts, and homicidal drivers plus crashed her motorcycle and much more.

So keep reading as the long-time traveler and journalist explains the story behind the memoir, the creative process and her tips for new writers.

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Case study: Daughter’s podcast with her 83yo poet laureate dad

Case study: Daughter's podcast with her 83yo poet laureate dad. Podcast artwork for The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write, Dr Treasure Shields Redmond with her father Dr Eugene B. Redmond, and together with her son and daughter.
Podcast The Memoir My Dad Wouldn’t Write (left), Dr Treasure Shields Redmond with her father Dr Eugene B. Redmond (top), and with Treasure’s son and daughter (bottom). Photos Treasure Shields Redmond

Creative memoir of emeritus professor of English Eugene B. Redmond

This week I have a radically honest and touching case study to share with you!

It is the story of how Dr Treasure Shields Redmond started a podcast with her well-known father Dr Eugene B. Redmond, age 83.

The show, The Memoir My Dad Wouldn’t Write, began in 2018 and has no topics off limits.

“It is a limited series of conversations between a daughter and a father about the things that make us family and the items in my dad’s life that have helped to shape who he is today,” Treasure said.

“You know he has had this incredible life as a cultural worker, poet, professor, activist and mentor but he wouldn’t write a memoir. 

“So this podcast is a way to get those conversations onto tape and to find out exactly what shaped this incredible, complex – and far from perfect – man that I love.”

Let’s discover more about this fascinating life-story project plus Treasure’s tips for doing something similar of your own …

Continue reading Case study: Daughter’s podcast with her 83yo poet laureate dad

Case study: She Writes Press memoir The Red Kitchen by Barbara Clarke

Case study: She Writes Press memoir The Red Kitchen by Barbara Clarke. Book cover of The Red Kitchen by Barbara Clarke, She Writes Press, and a portrait photo of Clarke.
The Red Kitchen by Barbara Clarke, She Writes Press. Portrait photo of Clarke.

What author Clarke wants you to know about writing her latest life story

In the lead up to International Women’s Day we are this week taking a close look at Barbara Clarke’s The Red Kitchen published by She Writes Press.

The intimate memoir, due out April 6, depicts change and discovery between mum and daughter — and how it’s never too late to come of age.

Previously Clarke published an indie memoir, Getting to Home: Sojourn in a Perfect House, about the process of building a house as a single woman. 

And she has also written for corporate clients, trade magazines, worked under a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant, nonprofit organisations, plus local and alternative newspapers.

So let’s find out more about Clarke’s new book, the writing process and her tips for fellow life-story writers …

Continue reading Case study: She Writes Press memoir The Red Kitchen by Barbara Clarke

Case study: Helping my 98yo grandmother write her autobiography

Case study: Helping my 98yo grandmother write her autobiography. An open book is tied with a red and white ribbon shaped into a heart. Photo by Pixabay from Pexels

Part 1: A challenging and rewarding journey to record a special life story

It has been a year since I gave my grandma Bonnie the very first copy of her life story.

Certainly it’s a book that is close to her heart – a labour of love.

And given we marked St Valentine’s Day earlier this week, I thought it would be timely to look back on how I got started helping my grandmother write her autobiography.

Indeed, through this project I learnt much about this wonderful lady.

However, I also discovered much about planning and creating a life story.

So keep reading to find out more about Part 1 (see Part 2 and Part 3) and how you can sit down and create a similar family project … 

Continue reading Case study: Helping my 98yo grandmother write her autobiography

Case study: Hang-glider star pens memoir The Phoenix Rising about traumatic brain injury and survival

Case study: Hang-glider star pens memoir The Phoenix Rising about traumatic brain injury and survival. Hang-glider pilot Helen Ross Lee before her accident, the front cover of The Phoenix Rising, and a portrait photo of Lee. Photos Helen Ross Lee
Hang-glider pilot Helen Ross Lee before her accident (from left), her memoir The Phoenix Rising, and author Lee today. Photos: Helen Ross Lee

Life story by nurse Helen Ross Lee shines spotlight on the amazing power of brain neuroplasticity

Helen Ross Lee is living proof that what doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger.

In 2008 the former high-achieving female hang-gliding competition pilot from Queensland, Australia, suffered a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).

The sportswoman, nurse and mother’s life was changed forever.

Over the past 12 years, Lee has slowly re-networked her brain to think, talk and walk plus found love again. 

But one of her greatest rewards has been publishing her life-story book The Phoenix Rising

“In writing my book, I have learned the art of survival. It has not been easy,” Lee said.

“I’ve learned some valuable things and I’ve had to let go of some things that were holding me back. 

“I’ve learned that there’s a vast difference between knowledge, understanding and wisdom.”

So keep reading to find out more about Lee’s inspiring and extraordinary life-story journey …

Continue reading Case study: Hang-glider star pens memoir The Phoenix Rising about traumatic brain injury and survival