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Hobbies and Memoir

Woman getting ready to run a race on a track

Are your pastimes and passions worthy of inclusion?

Typically, in your memoir you’ll write about your career and family, but what about hobbies and memoir—are they compatible? If you decide that your pastimes and passions worthy of inclusion, how do you present them?

The quick answer is yes, anything about yourself that you want readers to know can be appropriate to include in a memoir. However, memoirs typically have a theme. It’s tempting to shoehorn your favorite stories about your life into that theme, but the reader may not support such indulgence, even if you successfully pull off the justification you contrive for the inclusion.

But let’s say you decide to take that chance. Then you have two choices: dedicate a separate chapter, or sprinkle the hobby throughout the book.

A Dedicated Chapter

Dedicating a chapter to your hobby is the simpler of the two options. Find a place for that chapter that feels organic and doesn’t stop the action. Let’s say you’re an avid tennis player in a memoir about surviving domestic abuse. You’re going along chronologically without mentioning sports. But there’s one tennis game you remember playing against the abuser—a parent, spouse or partner—and during the game the person criticizes your abilities or yells at you, or maybe the game itself is the trigger for intensified abuse. That’s where you can insert the chapter.

Start this chapter either by setting the scene for that game or introducing your love of tennis to the reader. I’d lean toward the former. You set the scene, and then you spend a few paragraphs or pages on your tennis experiences. You go over the background of why you started playing and also can go into the future with information about later tennis achievements. Then come back to where you are chronologically in the book, at that game with your abuser, and describe that scene.

Recently, I helped a memoir author do something like that. I’m currently coaching an author who is writing mostly about her paranormal experiences and theories but wanted to include her love of opera. We crafted a chapter that picked up where her story was chronologically and linked her attendance at an opera at about that time with a paranormal experience she had. Then we traced other operas she’d attended both earlier and later in her life, describing her travel to cities to see them and any odd occurrences that took place.

A Sprinkle Throughout the Book

If you go in the opposite direction, by the time you get to the story of playing tennis with your abuser the reader already knows about your love of the game. One advantage of this is that you can build suspense about the eventual scene of your tennis match. You can have a paragraph like this:

“He suggested a game of tennis to see whether, at my young age, I could beat him. Since I’d already made plans to play with Lily that day, I had a legitimate excuse to turn down the invitation. The last thing I needed was for him to ruin one more passion for me. But I knew that, sooner or later, the invitation would morph into a command, and I’d have to face him on the tennis court. Once he got an idea in his head, he never let it go.”

Helping the Reader to Know You

Now let’s say you love to read. A lot of your down time has found you on a sofa or in a hammock, on a beach or in your bed, with a book or Kindle in your hands. You follow certain authors and feel that for people to really know you, they have to be aware of your taste in fiction. Does that belong in a memoir?

With skillful writing, you can get away with a lot. You can tie in your favorite books with events in your life or your introversion or what you had in common with the person you married. It can be enough for the reader to accept it as a way to fully know you.

I understand. Above you see a photo of me preparing to run a race in Senior Games track and field just last week. If I wrote a book about my later years, no matter what the theme, I think I would have to include some mention of how I transformed from a never-athlete into a senior quasi-athlete.

There are lots of ways to sneak in your hobby. Just be careful not to alienate your reader!

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Then just set up a chapter and start writing your memoir. Don’t worry about rules. There are no rules to writing your memoir; there are only trends. These trends are based on techniques and features identified in current top-selling memoirs. At best, they’re the flavor of the month. If you’re capturing your life in print for your family, for your own gratification or to inspire readers, rather than aiming to set off Hollywood screenplay bidding wars, these trends don’t even apply to you. You’ll write the memoir that suits you best, and it will be timeless, not trend-driven.There are no rules, but there are four steps:

1. Theme/framework
2. Writing
3. Editing/polishing
4. Self-publishing

You’ve researched this, too, and you’ve been shocked at the price for getting help with any one of those steps, much less all four. That’s because most memoir sites promise to commercialize your work. They’ll follow a formula based on current memoir trends, because they want to convince you that they can turn your memoir into a best-seller. These sites overwhelm you with unnecessary information not to help you, the memoir author, but to address Search Engine Optimization (SEO) algorithms so they can sell more.

That’s not what we do at Write My Memoirs. Our small community of coaches, writers and editors are every bit as skilled as any you’ll find, and we charge appropriately for their expertise and the time they’ll spend helping you craft a compelling, enjoyable read. But you won’t pay an upcharge for other websites’ commercialization, the marketing that follows, and the pages of intimidating “advice.” You can sell your book if you like—we have ISBNs available for you—but our organic process of capturing your story takes a noncommercial path.

If you want help with any or all of the four steps above, choose from our services or save money by selecting one of our packages. If you’d like to talk about what’s right for you, schedule a call. One year from now, you can be holding your published memoir in your hand. And at that point, it will be a big deal!