Books > Documenting Your Findings > Autobiographies and Journal Making
Autobiographies and Journal Making
These genealogy books are helpful for documenting your own personal history. To order any of the books below or for detailed information, click on the book title or the book cover. Note that the prices shown are our most recent update of Amazon.com's prices. The actual price is dictated by Amazon.com.
Click to view details of this book The Book of Myself : A Do-It-Yourself Autobiography in 201 Questions
by Carl Marshall, David Marshall (Contributor)
$10.46 207 pages Hardcover (January 1997)
A simple and elegant way to record the thoughts and experiences of a lifetime and to preserve them for generations to come, this handsome, keepsake book contains over 200 prompts divided into three life phases (Early, Middle, and Later Years), each with five different subject categories (Family, Friends, Education, Work/Responsibility, and The World).

Click to view details of this book Create Your Own Life's Story : The Simple Way to Record Your Personal History
by Glen Walker
$7.16 96 pages Paperback (September 1993)
See details for description.

Click to view details of this book Doing Oral History (Twayne's Oral History, No 15)
by Donald A. Ritchie
$16.00 265 pages Paperback (November 1994)
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Click to view details of this book A Family Remembers : How to Create a Family Memoir Using Video and Tape Recorders (Self-Counsel)
by Paul McLaughlin
$11.95 160 pages Paperback (November 1993)
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Click to view details of this book For All Time : A Complete Guide to Writing Your Family History
by Charley Kempthorne
$12.76 150 pages Paperback (September 1996)
For All Time gives tips on making your family history worth reading. It gives ideas for taking notes, making list, and organizing them in a narative that is inviting reading.

Click to view details of this book How to Interview a Sleeping Man
by Milli Brown, M. Loys Raymer (Illustrator), Karey Mackin (Editor)
$11.96 109 pages Paperback (December 1997)
Renowned family biographer Milli Brown put together this book of 50 tips to help neophytes get started on a book or video of family lore. "Never interview more than one person at a time," goes one piece of advice. "If the laughing, shouting, and arguing don't make you crazy, listening to the tape recording will". She has suggestions for interview preparations, easing unwilling subjects into the process, dealing with ticklish material or memory lapses, and more!



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