Books biographies
The best biographies and memoirs of 2024
There are myriad ways to tell the story of a life, as shown by this year’s best biographies. Craig Brown’s doorstopper A Voyage Around the Queen (4th Estate), about the reign of Elizabeth II, dispenses with linear storytelling in favour of a patchwork of diary entries, letters, vignettes, second-hand anecdotes and even dreams (the writer Paul Theroux once dreamed of being nestled in Her Majesty’s bosom). The result is an unorthodox and wonderfully irreverent book which, alert to the absurdities of the monarchy, reveals as much about how others saw the Queen as the woman herself.
Sonia Purnell’s Kingmaker: Pamela Churchill Harriman (Virago) is a rich and riveting portrait of another seemingly unknowable aristocrat. The daughter-in-law of Winston Churchill, Harriman was, says Purnell, a canny diplomat who exerted remarkable influence on mid-20th-century politics through her three marriages and numerous affairs with powerful men (her lovers included a prince, a shipping magnate and a celebrated US broadcaster). Lili Anolik’s Didion and Babitz(Atlantic Books) is a luminous joint biography of Joan Didion and Eve Babitz, inspired by newly unearthed correspondence between the two writers that reads like “a lovers’ quarrel”. Anolik traces both women’s lives and their fraught friendship in the late 60s and early 70s, which fell apart after Didion was hired to edit Babitz’s first book. Reader, she fired her.
Ekow Eshun’sThe Strangers (Hamish Hamilton) is a group biography, written in the second person, that artfully delves into the minds and motivations of five pioneering Black men: actor and playwright Ira Aldridge; explorer Matthew Henson; activist Malcolm X; footballer Justin Fashanu; and psychiatrist and thinker Frantz Fanon. Each is linked, writes Eshun, by being “an exile: a figure in motion through a world that regarded him as an alien”. Fanon is also the subject of The Rebel’s Clinic (Apollo), an enthralling n Publishing History
This is a chart to show the publishing history of editions of works about this subject. Along the X axis is time, and on the y axis is the count of editions published. Click here to skip the chart. Reset chart or continue zooming in. This graph charts editions published on this subject.Subjects
Biography, History, Histoire, Politics and government, Politique et gouvernement, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY, Juvenile literature, Ouvrages pour la jeunesse, Canada, biography, General, Dictionaries, Women, Biographie, History and criticism, Biografie, Femmes, Social life and customs, Histoire et critique, World War, 1939-1945, Criticism and interpretationPlaces
United States, Canada, France, Great Britain, États-Unis, Québec (Province), Québec, England, Ontario, Grande-Bretagne, Germany, China, British Columbia, Chine, Italy, India, Soviet Union, Quebec (Province), Colombie-Britannique, AllemagnePeople
Napoleon I Emperor of the French (1769-1821), William Shakespeare (1564-1616), Adolf Hitler (1889-1945), Charles Darwin (1809-1882), Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), Samuel de Champlain (1567-1635), Gandhi Mahatma (1869-1948), Albert Einstein (1879-1955), John F. Kennedy (1917-1963), Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)Times
20th century, 19th century, 20e siècle, 19e siècle, 18th century, 21st century, 17th century, 18e siècle, 21e siècle, 1945-
The 50 Best Biographies of All Time
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Crown The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo, by Tom Reiss
You’re probably familiar with The Count of Monte Cristo, the 1844 revenge novel by Alexandre Dumas. But did you know it was based on the life of Dumas’s father, the mixed-race General Thomas-Alexandre Dumas, son of a French nobleman and a Haitian slave? Thanks to Reiss’s masterful pacing and plotting, this rip-roaring biography of Thomas-Alexandre reads more like an adventure novel than a work of nonfiction. The Black Count won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography in 2013, and it’s only a matter of time before a filmmaker turns it into a big-screen blockbuster.
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Farrar, Straus and Giroux Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret, by Craig Brown
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Few biographies are as genuinely fun to read as this barnburner from the irreverent English critic Craig Brown. Princess Margaret may have been everyone’s favorite character from Netflix’s The Crown, but Brown’s eye for ostentatious details and revelatory insights will help you see why everyone in the 1950s—from Pablo Picasso and Gore Vidal to Peter Sellers and Andy Warhol—was obsessed with her. When book critic Parul Sehgal says that she “ripped through the book with the avidity of Margaret attacking her morning vodka and orange juice,” you know you’re in for a treat.
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Inventor of the Future: The Visi .
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