Part 3: What every aspiring life-story writer ought to know about telling family stories
“It’s beautiful” my grandmother Bonnie, 99, said through tears as she took the first look at her printed autobiography book.
“We did it together,” she said hugging me.
My family and I were visiting Bonnie earlier this year in a nursing home and were excited to finally give her a reader’s copy of her life story.
She was soon flipping to a photo of her younger self with long plaits to show my daughter, 7, as her doctor and a nurse popped by.
“Isn’t that amazing! I’m so glad you did this,” Bonnie’s long-time doctor said shaking his head incrediously.
It had taken my grandmother and me four years of planning, writing, polishing and publishing to get to this point.
There had been some serious ups and downs along the way but the writing had been worth it.
This is the third and final article about Bonnie’s life-story project (see articles part one and part two here!).
So keep reading to find out how we went from final draft to finished autobiography book in time for her 100th birthday this month during a global pandemic.
Continue reading Case study: Secrets to writing my 100yo grandmother’s autobiography