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The Secret of Memoirs

by Philip Yancey

| 39 Comments

Where the Light Fell: A Memoir, book coverWhen I decided to write a memoir, I went to the library and methodically made my way through every memoir on their shelves. For years I had been writing idea-driven books, and now I had to learn how to write pure narrative. A memoir should simply tell a story, without analysis or commentary.

Before long, I found the kind of memoir I didn’t want to write. Some people live such adventurous lives that they merely recount the facts. A fine example: Malcolm Muggeridge’s two-volume Chronicles of Wasted Time. The ironic title reflects Muggeridge’s judgment on the years before he converted to Christianity. (His Jesus Rediscovered tells the conversion story.) Unlike Muggeridge, I haven’t lived in Moscow or Calcutta, and I saw no point in an autobiography of my entire life. Frankly, most writers’ lives are boring; we sit at a keyboard all day.

I knew that my own memoir needed to focus on events from childhood and adolescence. Annie Dillard once commented that writers keep bringing up their childhood because that’s the only time they really lived. Soon I came across the Irish writer Roddy Doyle, who won the UK’s Booker Prize for Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha. The weird title first caught my eye, and reading Doyle I got intrigued by his attempt to reproduce a child’s point of view. Everything in the book is seen and interpreted through the eyes of Paddy Clarke, a ten-year-old boy in 1968.

Young Philip and his brother, 1960I wanted to do something similar: to capture what it’s like to learn to read, to grow up fatherless, to fight with my brother, to endure boring church services, to live in a trailer, to get bullied at school, to confront my own racism, to survive a sassy and cynical adolescence. I wanted to render the stages of my life as if they were unfolding in real time, with an emerging rather than settled point of view.

Where the Light Fell was released last October, and since then I’ve received several thousand responses. Ninety percent of them relate something of the reader’s own story. (I didn’t grow up Southern racist, but it was just as bad in Chicago…Your church stories remind me of my Seventh Day Adventist days.…) I get it. I read several hundred memoirs in the process of writing mine, and every single one sparked a memory from my youth that otherwise I probably would not have retrieved.

Here’s the secret of memoirs: they’re more about the reader than the writer. The good ones strike chords of resonance, summoning up scenes from the reader’s own life for reflection and contemplation.

Philip and his brother

Something unexpected happened as I worked on my memoir. The two dozen idea-driven books I had toiled over for four decades suddenly seemed incomplete. Ideas can be abstractions, stuff we may believe but never fully act on. A memoir presents life in all its rawness. I had often used personal stories in my idea-driven books, though always to illustrate a point. However, life sometimes doesn’t have a point. Time doesn’t tie everything together, but leaves behind loose ends, irreparable mistakes, unhealed relationships.

People ask me, “Was it painful, dredging up those difficult times?” Truthfully, it wasn’t. I felt I was bringing order to disorder, splicing together scenes from the past in hopes of making more sense of the present. My idea-driven books took on a new light as I wrote a kind of prequel, filling in the background.

I write about pain and suffering because I’ve encountered my share. I write about grace because I found it only as an adult, and the first great gulp slaked my thirst. I write about Jesus because of an encounter with him that I neither sought nor desired.

Writing a memoir, I learned that although we cannot change the past, perhaps we can keep it from tyrannizing the present. The past forms who we are, but need not determine who we will be.

Row of memoirs

Some people love reading memoirs, while others don’t. If you’re one of the former, I offer this list of a few that moved me and taught me about the craft.

  • Karen Armstrong, Through the Narrow Gate. Her experiences in a strict nunnery make my stories of fundamentalist domination seem tame.
  • Ray Bradbury, Dandelion Wine. A renowned science fiction writer nostalgically evokes his own boyhood in this fictionalized memoir.
  • Pat Conroy, My Reading Life. A fine reflection on books that he read, and the high school teacher who inspired him. Conroy wrote two other thematic memoirs, Conrack and My Losing Season, and drew heavily from his own life in his novels, especially The Great Santini.
  • Harry Crews, A Childhood: The Biography of a Place. Crews captures the dialect and ethos of the rural South.
  • Toi Derricotte, The Black Notebooks. A poetic account of a light-skinned black woman who could “pass” as white, and the racism she experienced.
  • Annie Dillard, An American Childhood. An overlooked memoir that tells of Dillard’s youth in Pittsburgh. Can anyone write better sentences than this Pulitzer Prize-winning author?
  • Alexandra Fuller, Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight. One of my very favorites. She describes her childhood in Zambia and Zimbabwe with an eccentric family. From her, I got the idea of using present tense throughout my memoir.
  • Elena Gorokhova, A Mountain of Crumbs. A superb account of coming of age in 1950s Russia.
  • Thomas Howard, Christ the Tiger. A snapshot of the Wheaton College subculture of the 1960s.
  • Rhoda Janzen, Mennonite in a Little Black Dress. The author has a good sense of humor, and is kind to her cultural roots.
  • James McBride memoirJames McBride, The Color of Water: A Black Man’s Tribute to His White Mother. Story of a Jewish/Christian woman in Harlem who raised twelve children, all of whom went on to college.
  • Frank McCourt, Angela’s Ashes. A classic: McCourt explores the grim poverty and Catholic subculture of his childhood in Limerick, Ireland.
  • Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church. Taylor has written several fine “spiritual memoirs” of her faith journey.
  • Tobias Wolfe, This Boy’s Life. Wolfe manages to channel an adult point of view through adolescent eyes.

If these don’t summon up a few memories from your own life, then demand a refund!

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Discussion

  1. Kam Congleton Avatar
    Kam Congleton

    Thank you, Philip, for continuing to write, despite having already put words down in so many helpful ways….You are so right , I think, in pointing out how memories relived– and retold– help us make a coherent story out of all those ideas that float around in our heads….longing to be ordered and packed away neatly. Well, the time will come when Jesus gives us new lives to live… Oh joy! for there is real hope for truly happy endings.

  2. Rob Lilwall Avatar
    Rob Lilwall

    Thank you for your memoir Philip. My wife and I were very moved and encouraged by it.
    I was wondering: besides this wonderful list of memoirs which you have appreciated as a memoirist, what would be the specifically Christian memoirs you have been most helped by as a Christian?
    (So not necessarily the “classic” Christian memoirs, but the ones you personally have appreciated the most).
    Thank you again.

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      Hudson Taylor’s Spiritual Secret, John Wesley’s Journals, Adoniram Judson, Henri Nouwen’s Genesee Diary, Thomas Merton, Frederick Buechner

  3. Aleks Jablonska Avatar
    Aleks Jablonska

    Dear Philip. We’ve met briefly in Cape Town in 2009 – you were the key note speaker at Learn to Earn’s 20th anniversary events. I’ve read (& loved!) most of your books but the Memoir just blew me away! Thank you for making it so personal & real. I both laughed & cried while listening to the audiobook on a recent long road trip. Was utterly spellbound throughout! Thank you so much & please visit us in CT again!

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      I remember that unique name, Aleks, and I’m glad to hear we’ve connected once again.

  4. Bob Ewell Avatar

    Philip, please recall that we chatted at one of Larry Crabb’s parties years ago, and I recently gave you a copy of my book Everyone on the Wall, about which you wrote a gracious note. If we are ever together again, we will have to swap stories (or not!). I’m three years older than you and grew up just up the road from you in Greenville, SC. We went to the same kind of fundamentalist Baptist churches and listened to the same radio preachers. You went to a legalistic college in South Carolina. I went to a legalistic private high school in Greenville. We’ll leave both unnamed. I know where you were because I, too, played piano for the barrel-chested tenor on two occasions. The son of Mr. H. was our pastor in Alabama in the late 70s. You have good taste. Mr. H. was a great man, and a wonderful teacher – he did a marriage seminar at our church. I’m not the prodigy Marshall was, but I have perfect pitch as well and also had to play a piano that was a half-tone flat. My solution wasn’t as complex as Marshall’s. I think I just had to not listen as I looked at my hands to play the right notes that didn’t sound right! Anyway, thanks for writing. It was a hard book to read…in a good way. I’m glad the Lord delivered us both from a legalistic background while allowing our faith to remain. I’m sorry about Marshall. That legalism is everywhere is hard to deny. Recently I preached on Luke 15, where I think the real prodigal is the older brother. Anyway, in trying to give an example of legalism, I think I mentioned playing cards. I preached the sermon three times, and after each service, someone came up to say, “Wow. You must have grown up like I did in the ______ church!” All three were different and none was the background I had. Keep up the good work.

  5. Ken Steckert Avatar
    Ken Steckert

    Your memoir reminded of “Crazy for God …” by Frank Schaeffer because of the negative light both portray their parents, especially the mother, at home. It is part of what kept me hopeful the book would take a turn for grace, as Schaeffer has love for his mother by book’s end. With you having written so much about grace, I was taken by surprise for the tenor of the book, as you did a great job of presenting the story as it happened. And as Schaeffer did, by book’s end there is grace towards your mother.

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      And the story has not ended. Since I turned in the mss., my mother and brother have had their first contacts in 51 years. Not exactly reconciliation, but definite progress.

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39 thoughts on “The Secret of Memoirs”

  1. Thank you, Philip, for continuing to write, despite having already put words down in so many helpful ways….You are so right , I think, in pointing out how memories relived– and retold– help us make a coherent story out of all those ideas that float around in our heads….longing to be ordered and packed away neatly. Well, the time will come when Jesus gives us new lives to live… Oh joy! for there is real hope for truly happy endings.

    Reply
  2. Thank you for your memoir Philip. My wife and I were very moved and encouraged by it.
    I was wondering: besides this wonderful list of memoirs which you have appreciated as a memoirist, what would be the specifically Christian memoirs you have been most helped by as a Christian?
    (So not necessarily the “classic” Christian memoirs, but the ones you personally have appreciated the most).
    Thank you again.

    Reply
  3. Dear Philip. We’ve met briefly in Cape Town in 2009 – you were the key note speaker at Learn to Earn’s 20th anniversary events. I’ve read (& loved!) most of your books but the Memoir just blew me away! Thank you for making it so personal & real. I both laughed & cried while listening to the audiobook on a recent long road trip. Was utterly spellbound throughout! Thank you so much & please visit us in CT again!

    Reply
  4. Philip, please recall that we chatted at one of Larry Crabb’s parties years ago, and I recently gave you a copy of my book Everyone on the Wall, about which you wrote a gracious note. If we are ever together again, we will have to swap stories (or not!). I’m three years older than you and grew up just up the road from you in Greenville, SC. We went to the same kind of fundamentalist Baptist churches and listened to the same radio preachers. You went to a legalistic college in South Carolina. I went to a legalistic private high school in Greenville. We’ll leave both unnamed. I know where you were because I, too, played piano for the barrel-chested tenor on two occasions. The son of Mr. H. was our pastor in Alabama in the late 70s. You have good taste. Mr. H. was a great man, and a wonderful teacher – he did a marriage seminar at our church. I’m not the prodigy Marshall was, but I have perfect pitch as well and also had to play a piano that was a half-tone flat. My solution wasn’t as complex as Marshall’s. I think I just had to not listen as I looked at my hands to play the right notes that didn’t sound right! Anyway, thanks for writing. It was a hard book to read…in a good way. I’m glad the Lord delivered us both from a legalistic background while allowing our faith to remain. I’m sorry about Marshall. That legalism is everywhere is hard to deny. Recently I preached on Luke 15, where I think the real prodigal is the older brother. Anyway, in trying to give an example of legalism, I think I mentioned playing cards. I preached the sermon three times, and after each service, someone came up to say, “Wow. You must have grown up like I did in the ______ church!” All three were different and none was the background I had. Keep up the good work.

    Reply
  5. Your memoir reminded of “Crazy for God …” by Frank Schaeffer because of the negative light both portray their parents, especially the mother, at home. It is part of what kept me hopeful the book would take a turn for grace, as Schaeffer has love for his mother by book’s end. With you having written so much about grace, I was taken by surprise for the tenor of the book, as you did a great job of presenting the story as it happened. And as Schaeffer did, by book’s end there is grace towards your mother.

    Reply
    • And the story has not ended. Since I turned in the mss., my mother and brother have had their first contacts in 51 years. Not exactly reconciliation, but definite progress.

      Reply

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