50 Must-Read Literary Biographies
Read your way into the literary biographies of well-known -- as well as lesser-known -- writers from around the world.
Sarah Ullery
Sarah suffers from chronic sarcasm, and an unhealthy aversion to noise. She loves to read, and would like to do nothing else, but stupid real life makes her go to work. She lives in the middle of a cornfield and shares a house with two spoiled dogs and a ton of books.
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I live vicariously through the lives and stories of the writers I love and admire. Sometimes I read biographies of authors whose lives parallel aspects of my own; small lives that eventually produce great art. Lives like Jane Austen and Emily Dickinson, or Penelope Fitzgerald who didn’t write her first book until she was 58.
I like to read biographies that share a commonality with my own life, but like the best fiction, I’d rather be transported to worlds with characters that are larger than life. Lives that are tumultuous, scandal-ridden, and full of perils. Lives that are exciting and rich and full of conflict. Lives that produce stories like Native Son , The Bell Jar, Lolita , A Rage in Harlem , or Frankenstein .
I also like to read about the lives of the authors of some of my favorite books—Iris Murdoch and The Sea, The Sea , Philip K. Dick and A Scanner Darkly , Mary Shelley and Frankenstein , Penelope Fitzgerald and The Blue Flower— but this can be a perilous exercise. Some authors were pretty terrible people, which can ruin your perception of their writing. But like most of us, artists and writers lived lives rife with nuance, and through even-handed, well-researched biographies, readers can take a peek into the minds that have created some of the stories we love.
The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism by Megan Marshall
The supposed “American Brontës,” the three Peabody sisters influenced the thinking of writers like Thoreau and Hawthorne. The youngest sister, Sophia, married Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Margaret Fuller: A New American Life by Megan Marshall
After you finish the story of the Peabody sisters and are searching for more stories about American Romanticism and the role women played in the literary scene at the time, pick up Megan Marshall’s other book, about Margaret Fuller.
The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes by Janet Malcolm
This is a biography of the biographies that have been written about Sylvia Plath. It tries to correct the myth surrounding Plath and Ted Hughes.
Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Her Daughter Mary Shelley by Charlotte Gordon
Mary Wollstonecraft died a week after giving birth to Mary Shelley, but in many ways, despite not knowing each other, their lives were very alike. A wonderful book about the mother who wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women and the daughter who wrote Frankenstein .
Neruda: The Poet’s Calling by Mark Eisner
A Biography of the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda:
“In this part of the story I am the one who Dies, the only one, and I will die of love because I love you, Because I love you, Love, in fire and blood . “ —from Pablo Neruda’s “I Do Not Love You Except Because I Love You”
Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom by David W. Blight
This is the most recent biography of Frederick Douglass. It’s a wonderfully rendered story of a complex and brilliant man who greatly influenced American history.
Eden’s Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father by John Matteson
I’m not a huge fan of Little Women — I find Louisa May Alcott’s life much more interesting than her writing.
Genet: A Biography of Janet Flanner by Brenda Wineapple
Genet is the pen name for Janet Flanner, a woman who fled her home in Indianapolis at 30 to live with her girlfriend in Paris in the 1920s. While in Paris, she became a correspondent for the New Yorker .
Warrior Poet: A Biography of Audre Lorde by Alexis De Veaux
Audre Lorde did not live a quiet life, and this biography relishes in the myth and power of Lorde as an early black lesbian feminist.
Vera (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov) by Stacy Schiff
What was it like to be married to the author of Lolita ? The story of Vera and Vladimir Nabokov was a love story that spanned 52 years. Stacy Schiff, if you’ve never read any of her other biographies, is a master.
Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow: The Tragic Courtship and Marriage of Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore by Eleanor Alexander
This has all the bad: racism, sexism, abuse, sexual assault—so I warned you! It’s a hard story. I hesitate to call it a romance—maybe there was love, but the relationship between Dunbar and Moore was definitely not stable. This is a relatively short biography, but it certainly packs a punch!
The Blue Hour: A Life of Jean Rhys by Lilian Pizzichini
I’ve always been hesitant to read Jean Rhys’s most famous book, Wide Sargasso Sea , because I’ve always loved Jane Eyre . But recently I picked up Jane Eyre for a reread and I thought, God, Rochester is an ass. Maybe it’s time for Wide Sargasso Sea .
Chester B. Himes: A Biography by Lawrence P. Jackson
Chester B. Himes is probably most famous for his crime noir series the Harlem Cycle , which starts with A Rage in Harlem . Himes was arrested for armed robbery and spent almost ten years in prison, but while in prison his articles were featured in publications like Esquire . Plagued by racism in America, Himes moved to Paris where he became famous for his Harlem series.
Mary Shelley by Miranda Seymour
Mary Shelley was the daughter of the feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, and wife to the poet Percy Shelley, who drowned when she was only 24. The idea for Frankenstein was born on a stormy night as a group of writers were telling scary stories.
James Baldwin: A Biography by David A. Leeming
David Leeming was friends with Baldwin for 25 years before writing his biography. This is a wonderful glimpse into the life of one of the preeminent voices of African American literature in the world.
Born to be Posthumous: The Eccentric Life and Mysterious Genius of Edward Gorey by Mark Dery
A man who created creepy comics and lived with a horde of cats and thousands of books automatically sounds sounds like the kind of person whose biography I want to read.
Becoming Modern: The Life of Mina Loy by Carolyn Burke
Both a poet and visual artist, Mina Loy moved in the most influential circles of her time. She bumped shoulders with Gertrude Stein, Man Ray, and Marcel Duchamp—to name a few.
Rebecca West: A Life by Victoria Glendinning
A great selling point for a biography is when the subject is described as a sexual rebel. I’m also a sucker for a story about a dysfunctional English family, which Rebecca West famously wrote with The Fountain Overflows .
The Brontë Myth by Lucasta Miller
Okay, I’d rather read about the Wollstonecrafts/Shelleys, or the Peabodys, because I think the Brontës are a bit overrated…but like the Plath biography, which was a biography of her biographies, this book tries to demystify the myth that surrounds the Brontës.
Anaïs Nin: A Biography by Deirdre Bair
Best known for her sexual exploits, diaries, and relationships with leading intellectuals of her time, Anaïs Nin was more than the sum total of her famous idiosyncrasies.
Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography by Deirdre Bair
A biography collected from conversations with de Beauvoir, who’s best known for her philosophical writing on existentialism and her relationship with Jean Paul Sartre.
Virginia Woolf by Hermione Lee
A well balanced biography about a woman whose life is as well known as her books; still, you’ll find some tidbits in this biography that you’ve probably never known, and might come to see Woolf in a new light—for better or worse. Hermione Lee is a master biographer.
Why This World: A Biography of Clarice Lispector
A writer whose work has seen a resurgence in recent years—Clarice Lispector was born in post–War World I Ukraine, and emigrated to Brazil in her early years. Her writing and life is steeped in mysticism.
Jane Crow: The Life of Pauli Murray by Rosalind Rosenberg
It’s hard to find biographies about black female writers. Especially writers from the 20th and 19th centuries. Jane Crow was a lawyer, writer, and civil rights crusader. She’s an example of a woman we should know more about.
Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor by Brad Gooch
I wish there were more biographies about Flannery O’Connor, the master of the short story. This is a good biography, but I want more.
How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at An Answer by Sarah Bakewell
Four hundred years ago Montaigne wrote The Essays , where he tried to answer the universal question: How to live? This biography explores his questions and answers in a historical context.
Ralph Ellison: A Biography by Arnold Rampersand
A wonderfully in-depth story of Ralph Ellison’s life. He was born in 1913 in the south and moved to New York City in 1936. He had a grandiose personality that was sometimes at odds with other writers and politically active intellectuals of his time.
A Life of Langston Hughes: Volume I: 1902–1941, I, Too, Sing America by Arnold Rampersad
Langston Hughes’s life is told in three volumes. The first relates Hughes’s early years as he traveled the world.
Edith Wharton by Hermione Lee
I own this book. It’s HUGE. I bought it after reading Edna St. Vincent Millay’s biography in which it is mentioned that Edith Wharton was in Paris at the same time as Millay. But while Millay struggled at times with finances, Wharton was born to privilege.
Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston by Valerie Boyd
In high school we had to choose a book from a list of 100 American classics to read every month. Their Eyes Were Watching God was the best book I read from that list. Zora Neale Hurston’s life was fascinating.
I Am Alive and You Are Dead: A Journey into the Mind of Philip K. Dick by Emmanuel Carrère
A Scanner Darkly is a favorite book. A life as strange as the stories he wrote: “ It is sometimes an appropriate response to reality to go insane .”
Richard Wright: The Life and Times by Hazel Rowley
This powerful story about the author of Native Son weaves Wright’s own writing and quotations into the biography.
The Life of Emily Dickinson by Richard B. Sewall
There are a lot of biographies of Emily Dickinson, but this is my choice.
Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life by Hermione Lee
Penelope Fitzgerald was nearly 60 before publishing her first book, which makes me love her. She’s best known for writing The Blue Flower , The Bookshop , and Offshore .
Katherine Anne Porter: The Life of an Artist by Darlene Harbour Unrue
“Pale Horse, Pale Rider” is one of my favorite short stories. A woman is in bed with a fever during the influenza epidemic, and in her fever she remembers her childhood, and worries about her fiancé who is a soldier fighting in the first world war. The author, Katherine Anne Porter, lived a life that was no less compelling.
Zelda by Nancy Milford
A woman driven mad by her husband’s lecherous appropriation of her personality and writing. Confession: I’m not a huge fan of F. Scott Fitzgerald, so it doesn’t pain me to discover he was a jerk.
Iris Murdoch: A Life by Peter J. Conradi
The Sea, The Sea is one of my favorite books. Charles Arrowby is absurd, frustrating, and totally realized as a man coming to the end of his life, but fighting like hell to delay the breakdown into old age. Iris Murdoch at first imagined herself to be the next George Eliot, but ended up embracing Dostoevsky’s influence.
Poet of the Appetites: The Lives and Loves of M.F.K. Fisher by Joan Reardon
Fisher wrote extensively about her own life in memoirs like The Gastronomical Me and How to Cook a Wolf , in which she writes about food and its relationship with life and love.
Alice Walker: A Life by Evelyn C. White
Alice Walker was the first black woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for her novel The Color Purple . This might be the only biography on the list whose subject is still alive, which brings a new dynamic to the biography.
Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life by Ruth Franklin
Your life can’t be all rainbows and unicorns if you’re writing stories like The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle . This is a biography about the woman, the books, and the times in which they existed.
The Banished Immortal: A Life of Li Bai by Ha Jin
Li Bai was a Chinese poet who lived a long, long time ago, but whose work and legacy is still greatly revered today in China.
Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay by Nancy Milford
My favorite literary biography. Edna St. Vincent Millay was fashioned as a modern Sappho, and a holdover of Victorian era poets like Elizabeth Barrett Browning. But despite her writing style, her personal life was very modern.
Gellhorn: A Twentieth-Century Life by Caroline Moorehead
The life of the illustrious war correspondent Martha Gellhorn who reported from the frontlines of most of the biggest wars of the 20th century. A fascinating figure.
Looking for Lorraine: The Radiant and Radical Life of Lorraine Hansberry by Imani Perry
Best known for her play A Raisin in the Sun , Lorraine Hansberry counted James Baldwin and Nina Simone as friends. She was a prominent voice in the civil rights movement, she joined one of the first lesbian organizations, and challenged JFK to take a wider stance on civil rights. Why don’t we hear more about Lorraine Hansberry more? She died at 34.
Borges: A Life by Edwin Williamson
To read his books and short stories, it would be easy to imagine that Borges’s life could be stranger than fiction. But this biography focuses on the human side of Borges and brings new light to his work and thinking.
Ida: A Sword Among Lions by Paula Giddings
Ida B. Wells was an African American reporter who investigated and fought to end lynching in the south. This is the story of a brilliant and fearless reporter, and an indictment against the United States.
Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder by Caroline Fraser
I’ve never read Little House on the Prairie . I prefer reading about the rocky life story of the author behind the books.
The Collected Autobiographies of Maya Angelou by Maya Angelou
Yes, an autobiography. I included it because I don’t think anyone should try to retell Maya Angelou’s story. Her telling, and poetry, should be the last word.
The Invention of Angela Carter: A Biography by Edmund Gordon
A biography about the author of the morbid and gothic fairytales like The Bloody Chamber and gothic novels like The Magic Toyshop .
My Soul Looks Back by Jessica B. Harris
Jessica B. Harris writes about her early life in New York City when she moved in social circles that included James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, and Maya Angelou. A vibrant city, full of vibrant people.
Harriet Jacobs: A Life by Jean Fagan Yellin
Harriet Jacobs wrote the memoir Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl , which became the most well-read slave narrative written by a woman. Jean Fagan Yellin expands on Harriet Jacobs life, and the world into which she escaped.
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Definition of Biography
A biography is the non- fiction , written history or account of a person’s life. Biographies are intended to give an objective portrayal of a person, written in the third person. Biographers collect information from the subject (if he/she is available), acquaintances of the subject, or in researching other sources such as reference material, experts, records, diaries, interviews, etc. Most biographers intend to present the life story of a person and establish the context of their story for the reader, whether in terms of history and/or the present day. In turn, the reader can be reasonably assured that the information presented about the biographical subject is as true and authentic as possible.
Biographies can be written about a person at any time, no matter if they are living or dead. However, there are limitations to biography as a literary device. Even if the subject is involved in the biographical process, the biographer is restricted in terms of access to the subject’s thoughts or feelings.
Biographical works typically include details of significant events that shape the life of the subject as well as information about their childhood, education, career, and relationships. Occasionally, a biography is made into another form of art such as a film or dramatic production. The musical production of “Hamilton” is an excellent example of a biographical work that has been turned into one of the most popular musical productions in Broadway history.
Common Examples of Biographical Subjects
Most people assume that the subject of a biography must be a person who is famous in some way. However, that’s not always the case. In general, biographical subjects tend to be interesting people who have pioneered something in their field of expertise or done something extraordinary for humanity. In addition, biographical subjects can be people who have experienced something unusual or heartbreaking, committed terrible acts, or who are especially gifted and/or talented.
As a literary device, biography is important because it allows readers to learn about someone’s story and history. This can be enlightening, inspiring, and meaningful in creating connections. Here are some common examples of biographical subjects:
- political leaders
- entrepreneurs
- historical figures
- serial killers
- notorious people
- political activists
- adventurers/explorers
- religious leaders
- military leaders
- cultural figures
Famous Examples of Biographical Works
The readership for biography tends to be those who enjoy learning about a certain person’s life or overall field related to the person. In addition, some readers enjoy the literary form of biography independent of the subject. Some biographical works become well-known due to either the person’s story or the way the work is written, gaining a readership of people who may not otherwise choose to read biography or are unfamiliar with its form.
Here are some famous examples of biographical works that are familiar to many readers outside of biography fans:
- Alexander Hamilton (Ron Chernow)
- Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder (Caroline Fraser)
- Steve Jobs (Walter Isaacson)
- Churchill: A Life (Martin Gilbert)
- The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary (Simon Winchester)
- A Beautiful Mind (Sylvia Nasar)
- The Black Rose (Tananarive Due)
- John Adams (David McCullough)
- Into the Wild ( Jon Krakauer )
- John Brown (W.E.B. Du Bois)
- Frida: A Biography of Frida Kahlo (Hayden Herrera)
- The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (Rebecca Skloot)
- Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln (Doris Kearns Goodwin)
- Shirley Jackson : A Rather Haunted Life ( Ruth Franklin)
- the stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit (Michael Finkel)
Difference Between Biography, Autobiography, and Memoir
Biography, autobiography , and memoir are the three main forms used to tell the story of a person’s life. Though there are similarities between these forms, they have distinct differences in terms of the writing, style , and purpose.
A biography is an informational narrative and account of the life history of an individual person, written by someone who is not the subject of the biography. An autobiography is the story of an individual’s life, written by that individual. In general, an autobiography is presented chronologically with a focus on key events in the person’s life. Since the writer is the subject of an autobiography, it’s written in the first person and considered more subjective than objective, like a biography. In addition, autobiographies are often written late in the person’s life to present their life experiences, challenges, achievements, viewpoints, etc., across time.
Memoir refers to a written collection of a person’s significant memories, written by that person. Memoir doesn’t generally include biographical information or chronological events unless it’s relevant to the story being presented. The purpose of memoir is reflection and an intention to share a meaningful story as a means of creating an emotional connection with the reader. Memoirs are often presented in a narrative style that is both entertaining and thought-provoking.
Examples of Biography in Literature
An important subset of biography is literary biography. A literary biography applies biographical study and form to the lives of artists and writers. This poses some complications for writers of literary biographies in that they must balance the representation of the biographical subject, the artist or writer, as well as aspects of the subject’s literary works. This balance can be difficult to achieve in terms of judicious interpretation of biographical elements within an author’s literary work and consideration of the separate spheres of the artist and their art.
Literary biographies of artists and writers are among some of the most interesting biographical works. These biographies can also be very influential for readers, not only in terms of understanding the artist or writer’s personal story but the context of their work or literature as well. Here are some examples of well-known literary biographies:
Example 1: Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay (Nancy Milford)
One of the first things Vincent explained to Norma was that there was a certain freedom of language in the Village that mustn’t shock her. It wasn’t vulgar. ‘So we sat darning socks on Waverly Place and practiced the use of profanity as we stitched. Needle in, . Needle out, piss. Needle in, . Needle out, c. Until we were easy with the words.’
This passage reflects the way in which Milford is able to characterize St. Vincent Millay as a person interacting with her sister. Even avid readers of a writer’s work are often unaware of the artist’s private and personal natures, separate from their literature and art. Milford reflects the balance required on the part of a literary biographer of telling the writer’s life story without undermining or interfering with the meaning and understanding of the literature produced by the writer. Though biographical information can provide some influence and context for a writer’s literary subjects, style, and choices , there is a distinction between the fictional world created by a writer and the writer’s “real” world. However, a literary biographer can illuminate the writer’s story so that the reader of both the biography and the biographical subject’s literature finds greater meaning and significance.
Example 2: The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens (Claire Tomalin)
The season of domestic goodwill and festivity must have posed a problem to all good Victorian family men with more than one family to take care of, particularly when there were two lots of children to receive the demonstrations of paternal love.
Tomalin’s literary biography of Charles Dickens reveals the writer’s extramarital relationship with a woman named Nelly Ternan. Tomalin presents the complications that resulted for Dickens from this relationship in terms of his personal and family life as well as his professional writing and literary work. Revealing information such as an extramarital relationship can influence the way a reader may feel about the subject as a person, and in the case of literary biography it can influence the way readers feel about the subject’s literature as well. Artists and writers who are beloved , such as Charles Dickens, are often idealized by their devoted readers and society itself. However, as Tomalin’s biography of Dickens indicates, artists and writers are complicated and as subject to human failings as anyone else.
Example 3: Virginia Woolf (Hermione Lee)
‘A self that goes on changing is a self that goes on living’: so too with the biography of that self. And just as lives don’t stay still, so life-writing can’t be fixed and finalised. Our ideas are shifting about what can be said, our knowledge of human character is changing. The biographer has to pioneer, going ‘ahead of the rest of us, like the miner’s canary, testing the atmosphere , detecting falsity, unreality, and the presence of obsolete conventions’. So, ‘There are some stories which have to be retold by each generation’. She is talking about the story of Shelley, but she could be talking about her own life-story.
In this passage, Lee is able to demonstrate what her biographical subject, Virginia Woolf, felt about biography and a person telling their own or another person’s story. Literary biographies of well-known writers can be especially difficult to navigate in that both the author and biographical subject are writers, but completely separate and different people. As referenced in this passage by Lee, Woolf was aware of the subtleties and fluidity present in a person’s life which can be difficult to judiciously and effectively relay to a reader on the part of a biographer. In addition, Woolf offers insight into the fact that biographers must make choices in terms of what information is presented to the reader and the context in which it is offered, making them a “miner’s canary” as to how history will view and remember the biographical subject.
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The 20 Best Biographies of Writers
The best biographies of writers cut through the gossip, the scandals, the myths, and the legends to deftly balance the life of the author with their literary legacy. This list features the best literary biographies of writers who penned classic works across more than four hundred years of literary history. From Shakespeare to Richard Wright to Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf, these favorite biographies of writers encompass a deep bench of the best biographies of famous writers. Let’s dive in!
But first, if you’re interested in more of the best literary biographies, be sure to check out our list of the 10 best biographies of poets :
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And now for an epic list of the 20 best biographies of writers…
Agatha christie: an elusive woman by lucy worsley.
Agatha Christie, one of the “Masters of Suspense,” lived a remarkable life while penning classics like Murder on the Orient Express and And Then There Were None . Read all about it in Lucy Worsley’s Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman . Among the best literary biographies, this one dispels the mysteries in the real life of this iconic mystery writer.
How to read it: Purchase Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman on Amazon
Also a poet: frank o’hara, my father, and me by ada calhoun.
This unusual literary biography blends personal memoir with a bio of one of the greatest poets of all time, Frank O’Hara (for his collected poems, check out this edition ). In Also a Poet , Ada Calhoun discovers tapes of interviews between Peter Schjeldahl, her father, an art critic, and poet Frank O’Hara. The recordings were intended to be used in Schjeldahl’s unfinished biography of O’Hara. One of the best biographies of writers, Calhoun sets out to complete her father’s book while also intertwining memoirs of her own complicated relationship with her father. The result is a raw and real read you won’t soon forget.
How to read it: Purchase Also a Poet on Amazon
Jane austen: a life by claire tomalin.
Among readers who have favorite biographies of writers, Claire Tomalin’s Jane Austen: A Life often ranks high among the best literary biographies. We all know Jane Austen—author of, among other classics, Pride and Prejudice and Emma —right? Not so fast. Tomalin’s biography uncovers the previously limited life of this incredibly influential writer.
How to read it: Purchase Jane Austen: A Life on Amazon
Begin again: james baldwin’s america and its urgent lessons for our own by eddie s. glaude jr..
The best biographies of writers explore the legacy of the famous author whose portrait they are trying to draw. And that’s exactly what Eddie S. Glaude Jr. does in Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessonsf or Our Own . This bio of James Baldwin, perhaps most famous for his novel with queer themes, Giovanni’s Room , argues that Baldwin’s vision of America remains relevant today.
How to read it: Purchase Begin Again on Amazon
Born to be posthumous: the eccentric life and mysterious genius of edward gorey by mark dery.
I’m a huge Edward Gorey fan. I’ve read his books—some of which are collected in Amphigorey: Fifteen Books —over and over again and count him as an influence on my own writing. So imagine how delightful it was to encounter Born to Be Posthumous , Mark Dery’s compelling portrait of Gorey, definitely one of he best biographies of writers. This engrossing literary biography captures the “eccentric life and mysterious genius” of Gorey in a book that illuminates this exceptional-but-often-overlooked pioneer of the macabre.
How to read it: Purchase Born to Be Posthumous on Amazon
The bradbury chronicles: the life of ray bradbury by sam weller.
I love Ray Bradbury. During a very difficult time in my life, I sought refuge in Bradbury’s imagination, devouring two of his most treasured short story collections, The Martian Chronicles and The Illustrated Man (get them both in this Ray Bradbury boxed collection by the Library of America). I was completely swept up in wonder and fascination. So I’m so excited to say that Sam Weller’s The Bradbury Chronicles illuminates the life of this towering figure in America’s literary history, easily one of the best biographies of famous writers. Read this book and learn about the incredible life of one of the most incredible authors ever.
How to read it: Purchase The Bradbury Chronicles on Amazon
The brontë myth by lucasta miller.
One of the best biographies of famous English writers, Lucasta Miller’s The Brontë Myth is a deep dive into the lives and literary works of the Brontë sisters, whom you may know best from Jane Eyre (Charlotte Brontë) and Wuthering Heights (Emily Brontë). Miller’s bio unfurls the tangled reputation of these three brilliant sisters, liberating them from the various schools of thought—psychoanalytical, feminist, etc.—that have embraced the Brontës and counted them as their own. Instead, we get a fresh update on the lives of these influential sister-authors, free of the various schools of criticism that have ensnared them in their jaws. (If you’re just getting started with the Brontës, check out this handsome box set of their most well-known novels .)
How to read it: Purchase The Brontë Myth on Amazon
Cross of snow: a life of henry wadsworth longfellow by nicholas a. basbanes.
Chances are you’ve heard of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, but until now, this iconic 19th century American author has lived a life undiscovered. Read the best of Longfellow’s work before diving into this incredible look at an incredible writer. In Cross of Snow , Nicholas A. Basbanes reveals the life of Longfellow, charting his influences and the writer he influenced himself. This breakthrough study is easily one of the best literary biographies.
How to read it: Purchase Cross of Snow on Amazon
Every love story is a ghost story: a life of david foster wallace by d. t. max.
The turbulent life of David Foster Wallace, author of that infamous classic, Infinite Jest , is demystified in D. T. Max’s Every Love Story Is a Ghost Story , the must-read literary biography of this important America scribe. The best biographies of writers sort through the gossip, the speculation, and the larger-than-life reputations of their subjects, allowing the author’s life to be seen in line with their work without overtaking their literary genius. And that’s exactly what Max manages in one of the best biographies of famous writers.
How to read it: Purchase Every Love Story Is a Ghost Story on Amazon
I am alive and you are dead: a journey into the mind of philip k. dick by emmanuel carrère.
The genius of Philip K. Dick has left us with classic sci-fi works like Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (inspiration for the SF film Blade Runner ) and A Scanner Darkly . But who was the man behind these important books that helped establish the science fiction genre? You’ll find the answer to that question in Emmanuel Carrère’s I Am Alive and You Are Dead , an essential literary biography for any fan of Dick’s writing. Definitely one of the best biographies of writers, I Am Alive and You Are Dead is subtitled “A journey into the mind of Philip K. Dick,” an apt description of this deep dive into the brain of this key figure in science fiction and literature in general.
How to read it: Purchase I Am Alive and You Are Dead on Amazon
T.s. eliot: an imperfect life by lyndall gordon.
I consider many of T.S. Eliot’s poems to be perfect, not to mention Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats , which was illustrated by Edward Gorey (whose bio I included above in this list of the best biographies of writers). But there’s no denying that Eliot lived a, well, complicated life that included anti-Semitism and misogyny. So how do we reconcile the poet’s work with the poet himself? You’ll find out in Lyndall Gordon’s T.S. Eliot: An Imperfect Life , among the greatest biographies of poets. Gordon takes Eliot on in this unflinching study of Eliot’s life and literature. The best literary biographies face their subject head on, revealing the “imperfect” lives of their subjects, and it’s precisely that approach that makes this book among the most essential biographies of famous English writers.
How to read it: Purchase T.S. Eliot: An Imperfect Life on Amazon
J.r.r. tolkien: a biography by humphrey carpenter.
Who was the man who wrote The Lord of the Rings , easily the most influential fantasy books ever written? You’ll find out in Humphrey Carpenter’s J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography . This one definitely ranks among the best biographies of writers because of the nimble way Carpenter weaves together the life of Tolkien with his work, offering a master class of how to write literary biographies. Uncover the man from the myth in this close read on the man who penned a fictional universe as vast and complete as our own universe.
How to read it: Purchase J.R.R. Tolkien: A Life on Amazon
Mary shelley by miranda seymour.
She wrote the groundbreaking science fiction novel Frankenstein , but who was the woman behind this classic story? In Miranda Seymour’s Mary Shelley , we discover exactly that. Among the best literary biographies, this book is a saga of the life of Mary Shelley, a life that saw as much sorrow and trauma as joy. In this book, surely one of the must-have biographies of female writers, Seymour sifts through the documents about Shelley’s life to situate famous English author within her historical and cultural context while also surveying how Shelley influenced the canon of English literature.
How to read it: Purchase Mary Shelley on Amazon
Richard wright: the life and times by hazel rowley.
Richard Wright is perhaps best known for his novel Native Son , but the author also contributed many more books and writing to American letters. In this book, Hazel Rowley digs deep into Wright’s exceptional life and magnificent literature to braid the two together. The result is one of the best biographies of writers, one that highlights the important contributions of a leading figure in American literary history.
How to read it: Purchase Richard Wright: The Life and Times on Amazon
Savage beauty: the life of edna st. vincent millay by nancy milford.
The poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay positions this influential author as one of the leading poets of twentieth century. And it’s precisely that legacy that Nancy Milford illuminates in Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay . With this fresh perspective on Millay, the midcentury master of verse, readers get one of the best biographies of poets. If all biographies of female writers were this comprehensive and inquisitive, there’d be no time to read anything else, marking this as an exceptional biography. If you’re interested in important female authors, check out this one vibrant, bold life of Millay, and you won’t be disappointed.
How to read it: Purchase Savage Beauty on Amazon
Shirley jackson: a rather haunted life by ruth franklin.
I’m a big fan of Shirley Jackson. I count We Have Always Lived in the Castle among my all-time favorite books. So it’s with great pleasure that I share that Ruth Franklin’s Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life definitely counts as one of the best biographies of writers. This literary biography goes deep into the life of Jackson, and in so doing, you’ll realize why Franklin subtitles this as “a rather haunted life.” Franklin highlights how this iconic writer danced on the edge of the macabre, radicalized the American literary world, and scandalized the public. It’s a book that’s as dishy as it is illuminating, ranking as among the best literary biographies.
How to read: Purchase Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life on Amazon
Updike by adam begley.
John Updike. Just the name of this author conjures up visions of some of the best writing in the English language, like the Rabbit tetralogy and critically acclaimed short stories . How on earth do you begin to assemble the life of this significant author? Somehow Adam Begley manages it in Updike , one of the best biographies of writers. Begley’s bio of Updike meets its match, becoming as innovative and important as its titular subject. The result is a dazzling biography whose story is just as gripping as one of Updike’s novels. You won’t want to pass this one up.
How to read it: Purchase Updike on Amazon
Virginia woolf by hermione lee.
When I was a senior in college, I did an independent study of Virginia Woolf with a great professor. To get ready for the course, I read biographies of Virginia Woolf, including Hermione Lee’s bio that I’m including in this list of the best literary biographies. Lee tackles her larger-than-life subject, Virginia Woolf, known for her Modernist novels like Mrs. Dalloway and, my personal favorite, To the Lighthouse . Lee is more than up to the task, and the result is, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer : “A biography wholly worthy of the brilliant woman it chronicles. . . . It rediscovers Virginia Woolf afresh.” If you’re at all curious about Woolf, the Modernists, the Bloomsbury Group, or the history of English literature, pick this one up.
How to read it: Purchase Virginia Woolf on Amazon
Will in the world: how shakespeare became shakespeare by stephen greenblatt.
Any list of the best biographies of famous English writers would be incomplete without a bio of the father of English literature: yep, William Shakespeare. What’s left to say about the Bard, who penned some of the most important writing in the English language ? Turns out, plenty. And that’s exactly what you’ll find in Stephen Greenblatt’s masterful biography Will in the World , which attempts to uncover Shakespeare’s origin story. Greenblatt explores Shakespeare’s early life, and the cultural, historical, and artistic forces that explain, so the subtitle says, “How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare.” The outcome is Will in the World , a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and part of the curriculum of anyone looking for the best biographies of writers. This literary biography proves it’s still possible to write fresh, surprising, captivating, and engrossing biographies of famous writers. And Will in the World is the ultimate mic-drop, making it the only Shakespeare biography you need.
How to read it: Purchase Will in the World on Amazon
Wrapped in rainbows: the life of zora neale hurston by valerie boyd.
Many people discover Harlem Renaissance author Zora Neale Hurston through her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God , but in the award-winning Wrapped in Rainbows , Valerie Boyd uncovers the writer’s total miraculous output and undeniable influence. This key book is for sure one of the best literary biographies that any student of American literature will want to check out.
How to read it: Purchase Wrapped in Rainbows on Amazon
And there you have it an essential list of the 20 best biographies of writers. which of these best literary biographies will you read first, share this:.
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Sarah S. Davis is the founder of Broke by Books, a blog about her journey as a schizoaffective disorder bipolar type writer and reader. Sarah's writing about books has appeared on Book Riot, Electric Literature, Kirkus Reviews, BookRags, PsychCentral, and more. She has a BA in English from the University of Pennsylvania, a Master of Library and Information Science from Clarion University, and an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts.
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What Is Biography? Definition, Usage, and Literary Examples
Biography definition, the history of biographies, types of biographies, the functions of biography, writers known for biographies, examples of biographies, further resources on biography, related terms.
A biography (BYE-og-ruh-fee) is a written account of one person’s life authored by another person. A biography includes all pertinent details from the subject’s life, typically arranged in a chronological order. The word biography stems from the Latin biographia , which succinctly explains the word’s definition: bios = “life” + graphia = “write.”
Since the advent of the written word, historical writings have offered information about real people, but it wasn’t until the 18th century that biographies evolved into a separate literary genre. Autobiographies and memoirs fall under the broader biography genre, but they are distinct literary forms due to one key factor: the subjects themselves write these works. Biographies are popular source materials for documentaries, television shows, and motion pictures.
The biography form has its roots in Ancient Rome and Greece. In 44 BCE, Roman writer Cornelius Nepos published Excellentium Imperatorum Vitae ( Lives of the Generals ), one of the earliest recorded biographies. In 80 CE, Greek writer Plutarch released Parallel Lives , a sweeping work consisting of 48 biographies of famous men. In 121 CE, Roman historian Suetonius wrote De vita Caesarum ( On the Lives of the Caesars ), a series of 12 biographies detailing the lives of Julius Caesar and the first 11 emperors of the Roman Empire. These were among the most widely read biographies of their time, and at least portions of them have survived intact over the millennia.
During the Middle Ages, the Roman Catholic Church had a notable influence on biographies. Historical, political, and cultural biographies fell out of favor. Biographies of religious figures—including saints, popes, and church founders—replaced them. One notable exception was Italian painter/architect Giorgio Vasari’s 1550 biography, The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects , which was immensely popular. In fact, it is one of the first examples of a bestselling book.
Still, it wasn’t until the 18th century that authors began to abandon multiple subjects in a single work and instead focus their research and writing on one subject. Scholars consider James Boswell’s 1791 The Life of Samuel Johnson to be the first modern biography. From here, biographies were established as a distinct literary genre, separate from more general historical writing.
As understanding of psychology and sociology grew in the 19th and early 20th centuries, biographies further evolved, offering up even more comprehensive pictures of their subjects. Authors who played major roles in this contemporary approach to biographing include Lytton Strachey, Gamaliel Bradford, and Robert Graves.
While all biographical works chronicle the lives of real people, writers can present the information in several different ways.
- Popular biographies are life histories written for a general readership. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot and Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer are two popular examples.
- Critical biographies discuss the relationship between the subject’s life and the work they produced or were involved in; for example, The Billionaire Who Wasn’t: How Chuck Feeney Secretly Made and Gave Away a Fortune by Conor O’Clery and Unpresidented: A Biography of Donald Trump by Martha Brockenbrough.
- Historical biographies put greater understanding on how the subject’s life and contributions affected or were affected by the times in which they lived; see John Adams by David McCullough and Catherine the Great by Peter K. Massie.
- Literary biographies concentrate almost exclusively on writers and artists, blending a conventional narrative of the historical facts of the subject’s life with an exploration of how these facts impacted their creative output. Some examples include Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay by Nancy Milford and Jackson Pollock: An American Saga by Gregory White Smith and Steven Naifeh.
- Reference biographies are more scholarly writings, usually written by multiple authors and covering multiple lives around a single topic. They verify facts, provide background details, and contribute supplemental information resources, like bibliographies, glossaries, and historical documents; for example, Black Americans in Congress, 1870-2007 and the Dictionary of Canadian Biography .
- Fictional biographies, or biographical novels, like The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory, incorporate creative license into the retelling of a real person’s story by taking on the structure and freedoms of a novel. The term can also describe novels in which authors give an abundance of background information on their characters, to the extent that the novel reads more like a biography than fiction. An example of this is George R.R. Martin’s Fire and Blood , a novel detailing the history of a royal family from his popular A Song of Ice and Fire
Biographies and Filmed Entertainment
Movie makers and television creators frequently produce biographical stories, either as dramatized productions based on real people or as nonfiction accounts.
Documentary
This genre is a nonfictional movie or television show that uses historical records to tell the story of a subject. The subject might be a one person or a group of people, or it might be a certain topic or theme. To present a biography in a visually compelling way, documentaries utilize archival footage, recreations, and interviews with subjects, scholars, experts, and others associated with the subject.
Famous film documentaries include Grey Gardens, a biography of two of Jacqueline Kennedy’s once-wealthy cousins, who, at the time of filming, lived in squalor in a condemned mansion in the Hamptons; and I Am Not Your Negro , a biography of the life and legacy of pioneering American author James Baldwin.
Television documentary series tell one story over the course of several episodes, like The Jinx : The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst , a biography of the real estate heir and alleged serial killer that focused on his suspected crimes. There are many nonfiction television shows that use a documentary format, but subjects typically change from one episode to the next, such as A&E’s Biography and PBS’s POV .
These films are biographical motion pictures, written by screenwriters and performed by actors. They often employ a certain amount of creative liberty in their interpretation of a real life. This is largely done to maintain a feasible runtime; capturing all of the pivotal moments of a subject’s life in a 90- or 120-minute movie is all but impossible. So, filmmakers might choose to add, eliminate, or combine key events and characters, or they may focus primarily on one or only a few aspects of the subject’s life. Some popular examples: Coal Miner’s Daughter , a biography of country music legend Loretta Lynn; Malcom X , a biopic centered on the civil rights leader of the same name; and The King’s Speech , a dramatization of Prince Albert’s efforts to overcome a stutter and ascend the English throne.
Semi-fictionalized account
This approach takes a real-life event and interprets or expands it in ways that stray beyond what actually happened. This is done for entertainment and to build the story so it fits the filmmaker’s vision or evolves into a longer form, such as a multi-season television show. These accounts sometimes come with the disclaimer that they are “inspired by true events.” Examples of semi-fictionalized accounts are the TV series Orange Is the New Black , Masters of Sex , and Mozart of the Jungle —each of which stem from at least one biographical element, but showrunners expounded upon to provide many seasons of entertainment.
Biographies inform readers about the life of a notable person. They are a way to introduce readers to the work’s subject—the historical details, the subject’s motivations and psychological underpinnings, and their environment and the impact they had, both in the short and long term.
Because the author is somewhat removed from their subject, they can offer a more omniscient, third-person narrative account. This vantage point allows the author to put certain events into a larger context; compare and contrast events, people, and behaviors predominant in the subject’s life; and delve into psychological and sociological themes of which the subject may not have been aware.
Also, a writer structures a biography to make the life of the subject interesting and readable. Most biographers want to entertain as well as inform, so they typically use a traditional plot structure—an introduction, conflict , rising of tension, a climax, a resolution, and an ending—to give the life story a narrative shape. While the ebb and flow of life is a normal day-to-day rhythm, it doesn’t necessarily make for entertaining reading. The job of the writer, then, becomes one of shaping the life to fit the elements of a good plot.
Many modern writers have dedicated much of their careers to biographies, such as:
- Kitty Kelley, author of Jackie Oh! An Intimate Biography; His Way: The Unauthorized Biography of Frank Sinatra ; and The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty
- Antonia Fraser, author of Mary Queen of Scots ; Cromwell; Our Chief of Men ; and The Gunpowder Plot: Terror and Faith in 1605
- David McCullough, author of The Path Between the Seas; Truman ; and John Adams
- Andrew Morton, author of Diana: Her True Story in Her Own Words; Madonna ; and Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography
- Alison Weir, author of The Six Wives of Henry VIII; Eleanor of Aquitaine: By the Wrath of God; Queen of England ; and Katherine Swynford: The Story of John of Gaunt and His Scandalous Duchess
1. James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson
The biography that ushered in the modern era of true-life writing, The Life of Samuel Johnson covered the entirety of its subject’s life, from his birth to his status as England’s preeminent writer to his death. Boswell was a personal acquaintance of Johnson, so he was able to draw on voluminous amounts of personal conversations the two shared.
What also sets this biography apart is, because Boswell was a contemporary of Johnson, readers see Johnson in the context of his own time. He wasn’t some fabled figure that a biographer was writing about centuries later; he was someone to whom the author had access, and Boswell could see the real-world influence his subject had on life in the here and now.
2. Sylvia Nasar, A Beautiful Mind
Nasar’s 1998 Pulitzer Prize-nominated biography of mathematician John Nash introduced legions of readers to Nash’s remarkable life and genius. The book opens with Nash’s childhood and follows him through his education, career, personal life, and struggles with schizophrenia. It ends with his acceptance of the 1994 Nobel Prize for Economics. In addition to a Pulitzer nomination, A Beautiful Mind won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography, was a New York Times bestseller, and provided the basis for the Academy Award-winning 2001 film of the same name.
3. Catherine Clinton, Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom
Clinton’s biography of the abolitionist icon is a large-scale epic that chronicles Tubman’s singular life. It starts at her birth in the 1820s as the slave Araminta Ross, continuing through her journey to freedom; her pivotal role in the Underground Railroad; her Moses-like persona; and her death in 1913.
Because Tubman could not read or write, she left behind no letters, diaries, or other personal papers in her own hand and voice. Clinton reconstructed Tubman’s history entirely through other source material, and historians often cite this work as the quintessential biography of Tubman’s life.
4. Megan Mayhew Bergman, Almost Famous Women
Almost Famous Women is not a biography in the strictest sense of the word; it is a fictional interpretation of real-life women. Each short story revolves around a woman from history with close ties to fame, such as movie star Marlene Dietrich, Standard Oil heiress Marion “Joe” Carstairs, aviatrix Beryl Markham, Oscar Wilde’s niece Dolly, and Lord Byron’s daughter Allegra. Mayhew Bergman imagines these colorful women in equally colorful episodes that put them in a new light—a light that perhaps offers them the honor and homage that history denied them.
Newsweek compiled their picks for the 75 Best Biographies of All Time .
The Open Education Database has a list of 75 Biographies to Read Before You Die .
Goodreads put together a list of readers’ best biography selections .
If you’re looking to write biographies, Infoplease has instructions for writing shorter pieces, while The Writer has practical advice for writing manuscript-length bios.
Ranker collected a comprehensive list of famous biographers .
- Autobiography
- Short Story
What Is A Biography? Examples In Literature
Definition of biography.
A biography tells someone’s life story by researching things like documents, records and interviewing people who knew them. The writer is called the biographer and the person whose life they are writing about is called the subject. The main goal is to share what the subject experienced and achieved. It also helps the readers to understand who they were by learning about their personality, experiences and impact on others.
Most biographies follow the order of the subject’s life. It talks about when they were born, grew up, got educated, important people in their life and how their life changed over the time. It explains key events and what influenced who they became. In addition to facts, biographies analyze how history affected the subject and try to understand their character, reasons for things, beliefs and legacy. It looks at the importance of their life.
Common Examples of Biography Subjects
Here are some common examples of subjects that biographies have been written about:
- Politicians: Barack Obama and Winston Churchill
- Business leaders: Steve Jobs and Bill Gates
- Athletes: Michael Jordan and Serena Williams
- Entertainers: Oprah Winfrey and Elvis Presley
- Writers: J.K. Rowling and Ernest Hemingway
- Activists: Martin Luther King Jr. and Susan B. Anthony
- Scientists: Albert Einstein and Marie Curie
- Historical figures: Abraham Lincoln and Cleopatra
Famous Biographical Works
Here are some famous and influential examples of biographical works:
- The Lives of the Caesars (117 AD) by Suetonius – A landmark work of biographical history on the Roman emperors.
- The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) – The civil rights leader’s powerful personal account of his radicalization.
- Truman (1992) by David McCullough – A Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of the US president.
- Becoming (2018) by Michelle Obama – The former First Lady’s chart-topping memoir.
- Steve Jobs (2011) by Walter Isaacson – The bestselling biography of the Apple co-founder based on unprecedented access.
- Becoming (2018) by Michelle Obama – The former First Lady’s memoir broke sales records.
- Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels (2011-2015) – This series of semi-autobiographical novels offers rich portraits of two friends growing up in mid-20th century Naples.
- Born a Crime (2016) by Trevor Noah – The comedian’s funny yet moving memoir about growing up mixed-race in apartheid South Africa.
- Me (2018) by Elton John – The music icon’s candid autobiography was a bestseller.
- The Undocumented Americans (2020) by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio – Essays profiling immigrants living without documentation in the US.
- Caste (2020) by Isabel Wilkerson – A groundbreaking work comparing the US racial hierarchy to caste systems around the world.
- Entangled Life (2020) by Merlin Sheldrake – A unique biography of fungi and their profound role in nature and human civilization.
- The Anthropic Podcast – Interviews with AI safety researchers, conducted to document the development of advanced AI.
- The Code Breaker (2021) by Walter Isaacson – A biography of Nobel Prize-winning DNA pioneer Jennifer Doudna.
Difference between Biography, Autobiography and Memoir
Here are the main differences between biography, autobiography, and memoir:
Biography: It is written about another person by someone else (the biographer). In biography, the research methods like interviews, archives etc. have been used to study the subject’s life. It aims to give an objective account of the subject’s life and impact from a third-person perspective.
Autobiography: It is written by the subject about their own life. Autobiography retells events from the first-person perspective of the author. It follows a chronological narrative of the author’s life experiences.
Memoir: It is written by the subject about their own life experiences. Memoir typically focuses on a specific period, theme, or important event rather than a comprehensive life story. More subjective and reflective than autobiography, emphasizing personal insights and emotions.
Other differences:
- Biographies require research approval from publishers, autobiographies/memoirs do not.
- Biographies aim for objectivity while autobiographies/memoirs embrace subjectivity.
- Memoirs have more flexibility in structure than strict chronology of autobiographies.
- Biographies are often written after the subject’s death while autobiographies/memoirs are written during the author’s lifetime.
Examples of Biography in Literature
“pride and prejudice” by jane austen.
Mr. Bennet was among the earliest of those who waited on Mr. Bingley. He had always intended to visit him, though to the last always assuring his wife that he should not go; and till the evening after the visit was paid she had no knowledge of it. It was then disclosed in the following manner. Observing his second daughter employed in trimming a hat, he suddenly addressed her with:
‘I hope Mr. Bingley will like it, Lizzy.’ ‘We are not in a way to know what Mr. Bingley likes,’ said her mother resentfully, ‘since we are not to visit.’ ‘But you forget, mama,’ said Elizabeth, ‘that we shall meet him at the assemblies, and that Mrs. Long promised to introduce him.’ ‘I do not believe Mrs. Long will do any such thing. She has two nieces of her own. She is a selfish, hypocritical woman, and I have no opinion of her.’ ‘No more have I,’ said Mr. Bennet; ‘and I am glad to find that you do not depend on her serving you.’ Mrs. Bennet deigned not to make any reply, but, unable to contain herself, began scolding one of her daughters.”
In the aforesaid excerpt, Austen introduces Mr. Bennet’s character and family dynamics through his witty remarks and the reactions of his wife. This brief scene provides insight into both Mr. Bennet and Mrs. Bennet as individuals through their discussion revealing aspects of their personalities and marriage. It serves as an example of how biography can be subtly woven into fiction to immerse the reader in the world and relationships of the characters.
“Great Expectations” by Charles Dicken
“My sister, Mrs. Joe Gargery, was more than twenty years older than I, and had established a great reputation with herself and the neighbours because she had brought me up ‘by hand.’ Having at that time to find out for myself what the expression meant, and knowing her to have a hard and heavy hand, and to be much in the habit of laying it upon her husband as well as upon me, I supposed that Joe Gargery and I were both brought up by hand.”
This passage introduces Pip and provides biographical details about his upbringing by his sister Mrs. Joe Gargery through his first-person narration.
“Emma” by Jane Austen
“Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition, seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had lived nearly twenty-one years in the world with very little to distress or vex her.”
This brief paragraph at the start of the novel establishes the protagonist Emma Woodhouse’s biography and character through a succinct third-person description of her privileged circumstances and pleasant disposition.
“War and Peace” by Leo Tolstoy
“Prince Andrew Bolkonsky received a letter from his sister, the lovely Princess Mary, whom two years ago—in 1809—he had left in Moscow and had not seen again since. She wrote…”
This brief passage introduces Prince Andrew and provides context about his relationship and separation from his sister Princess Mary giving biographical details that set the stage for their storyline.
“David Copperfield” by Charles Dickens
“I was born in Blunderstone, in Suffolk, or ‘thereby,’ as they say in Scotland. I was a posthumous child. My father’s name was Copperfield; he was a twelfth cousin of Anthropic, and not anything like him.”
Through the first-person narration of David Copperfield, this excerpt establishes biographical facts about his birthplace, parentage and family connections in a lively engaging manner typical of Dickens’ prose.
“The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald
“In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I’ve been turning over in my mind ever since. ‘Whenever you feel like criticizing any one,’ he told me, ‘just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.'”
This opening passage immediately establishes biographical context about the narrator Nick Carraway and his relationship with his father providing insight into Nick’s upbringing and perspective.
“Mrs. Dalloway” by Virginia Woolf
“Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself. For Lucy had her work cut out for her. The doors would be taken off their hinges; Rumpelmayer’s men were coming. And then, thought Clarissa Dalloway, what a morning – fresh as if issued to children on a beach.”
These first lines subtly introduce Clarissa Dalloway and provide biographical clues about her social class and lifestyle through references to her household staff and high-end florist.
Further reading: Literary Devices That Start with B
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50 Essential Literary Biographies
Literary biography is a hugely significant, if often overlooked, enterprise. Today, much of what we know about the authors we admire is filtered through an ocean of online mini-biographies, nearly all of which are copies of copies. The original source of an enormous amount of this information is the literary biography, and in the case of most authors, there are precious few examples of such books. Even exceedingly famous authors are gifted only a handful of quality biographies.
With this in mind, I’ve come up with a list of 50 essential literary biographies. By no means am I arguing that these are the only essential biographies; I’m simply arguing that they are essential . I’ve tried, too, to strike a balance between quality, frequently groundbreaking books and the biographies that are the most enjoyable to read. I should also admit that in the course of researching this post, I found a regrettable dearth of literary biographies of Arab and Asian authors — this being largely a function of the myopia of American publishing, and the usual requirement that the author no longer be living. It’s a problem that I hope to help correct in a future post.
So here they are: 50 essential literary biographies. And if you have a preference for a different biography, please post it in the comments.
Jane Austen: A Life , Claire Tomalin
Love affairs, a death by guillotine, the Napoleonic wars: Tomalin’s biography puts to bed the myth of Austen’s life as dull and uneventful.
How to Live: Or a Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer , Sarah Bakewell
This great, very recent biography of Montaigne is a fantastic update of the form. And it provides crucial insight into a man who was one of the first to tell his own story.
Sylvia Plath: A Biography by Linda W. Wagner-Martin
Still my favorite Plath biography, Wagner-Martin’s book was the first to take into account her unpublished writings. It’s an engaging entry point into a (highly debated) tumultuous life.
The Life of Langston Hughes , Arnold Rampersad
This multi-volume biography of Langston Hughes is indispensable for the way it charts his peripatetic life, which took him from Mexico to the Soviet Union and elsewhere. It also accounts for Hughes’ massive literary influence.
Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time , Joseph Frank
One of the greatest literary biographies ever written, Frank’s five-volume account details the nearly unfathomable life and literary career of a writer who endured epilepsy and exile.
Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor , Brad Gooch
Famously hard to pin down, much of what we know about Flannery O’Connor’s life comes from her correspondences with writers like Thomas Merton. Gooch’s recent biography maps the literary relationships she cultivated while confined to a farm because of chronic illness.
Literchoor Is My Beat: A Life of James Laughlin, Publisher of New Directions , Ian S. MacNiven
Released in 2014, this excellent biography is now up for a NBCC award. Laughlin, publisher of New Directions, was largely responsible for bringing international modernism to America.
Why This World: A Biography of Clarice Lispector , Benjamin Moser
Moser handles the precocious genius of the Brazilian Lispector with great success. Along with her prodigious talent and the excellent work of translators, this biography is part of the reason for her recent renaissance.
Boswell’s Presumptuous Task: The Making of the Life of Dr. Johnson , Adam Sisman
Boswell’s study of Samuel Johnson is our benchmark for the form of literary biography. Sisman dutifully unravels the life and work of the little understood biographer.
Virginia Woolf , Hermione Lee
Mental illness, sexual abuse, and suicide: all are woven together in this, the best-written of Woolf biographies.
James Joyce , Richard Ellmann
Still the best biography of James Joyce, and one of the most revered literary biographies of the 20th century.
Marcel Proust: A Biography , George Painter
Like Ellmann’s biography of Joyce, this pathbreaking work on Proust redistributed the idea of what literary biography could be. How to write about an author who so beautifully spun his own life into fiction?
Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography , Deirdre Bair
Bair is one of my favorite biographers, and along with her work on Beckett, this definitive biography of Simone de Beauvoir is a classic. (And I think it’s out of print…)
Samuel Beckett , Deirdre Bair
Still the best biography of Saint Beckett, in my honest opinion. It proves that some of the best literary biography is written about those whose lives are thought to be too boring to consider. Assistant to Joyce, chauffeur to Andre the Giant, Beckett’s life should be considered and reconsidered in light of the constant recourse to “fail better” ethics.
Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay , Nancy Milford
A deeply loved biography that changes our entire notion, literary and biographical, of a woman who led a fascinating life. St. Vincent Millay may now be forever known as the Queen of the Jazz Age.
Elizabeth Gaskell: A Habit of Stories , Jenny Uglow
Another of my favorite historians and biographers, Uglow has a new book out this year on Britain during the Napoleonic wars. This prizewinning look at Elizabeth Gaskell led to a renaissance in interest about her work.
George Eliot , Jenny Uglow
There may be more definitive biographies of Eliot, but, again, Uglow’s is my favorite. This book is tragically out of print in America.
Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston , Valerie Boyd
This beautiful work on the life of Zora Neal Hurston was the first definitive literary biography of the writer in a quarter century. All 21st-century American writers owe not just a literary debt to Hurston, but also a more robustly intellectual one. Too few people realize that she was also a folklorist/anthropologist.
Borges: A Life , Edwin Williamson
Borges lived a mostly sexless life, although it seems to have gone by without the intense moral angst of T.S. Eliot. Somehow, still, this robust biography of great Argentine still manages to be riveting.
The Brontë Myth , Lucasta Miller
This deconstructive or meta-biography rescues the sisters from era-dependent historiographic obsession.
Byron: Life and Legend , Fiona MacCarthy
The charismatic psycho whose nomadic life took him across continents, Byron is often instrumentalized without being understood. This definitive biography puts an end to that silliness.
Rebecca West: A Life , Victoria Glendinning
The feminist, socialist Londoner Rebecca West led one of the most fascinating lives of any writer in the 20th century. Glendinning’s book should be taught in American elementary schools.
Charles Dickens: A Life , Claire Tomalin
Others will point to more definitive biographies of Dickens, but this is by far the most enjoyable to read. A Dickens biography that almost reads like Dickens.
Edith Wharton , Hermione Lee
This hugely important biography upended many tired notions about Wharton’s life during the Gilded Age. It’s still the definitive choice, and possibly the best melding of literary sympathy and revision on this list.
Dante: The Poet, the Political Thinker, the Man , Barbara Reynolds
There are many, many biographers of Dante, but Reynolds, for me, does the best work when it comes to pulling together the strands of the poet’s highly tempestuous biography. Political violence, broken love, exile. Everything is here.
Becoming Modern: The Life of Mina Loy , Carolyn Burke
FSG is reprinting Loy’s work, and it’s relatively safe to assume that the vanguardist writer is on the verge of a renaissance. Hopefully Burke’s trailblazing study gets the same treatment.
Frantz Fanon: A Biography , David Macey
The biggest cheat on this list — some may argue that Fanon is not literary, and that Macey’s work does not constitute a literary biography. I disagree. The literary and philosophical quality of Fanon’s writing is with us more than ever today, and Macey’s book does a remarkable job of bringing it all together.
Hart Crane: A Life , Clive Fisher
Violent, drunk, suicidally enamored with the ocean: Hart Crane led one of the most fascinating lives of all American poets. Clive Fisher’s biography swan-dives into the craziness.
Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft , Lyndall Gordon
This is a landmark corrective study — as the title suggests — of the “first feminist,” Mary Wollstonecraft. There is a substantial argument to be made that this is the most important such biography on this list.
Richard Wright: The Life and Times , Hazel Rowley
One of the greatest and most consistently ignored American writers — because of his race and his complex negotiation of communism — Wright is thankfully met here with a superb biographical mind. Rowley’s study of the author of Native Son remains, to my knowledge, the best.
Anne Sexton: A Biography , Diane Wood Middlebrook
Middlebrook’s 1991 biography of Sexton was controversial for its sexual and psychosexual revelations, but it was nominated, nonetheless, for the National Book Award. I would love to see an update considering the debt young American poets owe to her work.
Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare , Stephen Greenblatt
This is meant, on one level, to irk some readers. The truth is that it is impossible to satisfy everyone with a single definitive biography of Shakespeare. But if anyone deserves the New Historical or post-New Historical treatment, it’s him.
Mary Shelley , Miranda Seymour
A sympathetic and deeply literary treatment of a turbulent life, Seymour’s biography of Shelley was called, upon its release in 2001, “one of the finest and most significant literary biographies of recent years.”
I Am Alive and You Are Dead: A Journey Into the Mind of Philip K. Dick , Emmanuel Carrère
In many ways, we persistently endure in the mind of Philip K. Dick, at least through our media. This biography maps the development of this mind beginning with the death of Dick’s infant twin sister. This is probably the most perfect match of biography to subject on the entire list.
Kafka: The Decisive Years , Reiner Stach
It’s strange that the definitive biography of a writer would begin not with his origins, but in 1910, when the author was in his mid-20s. Then again, this is Kafka we’re talking about.
James Baldwin: A Biography , David Leeming
I’ve heard that this biography of James Baldwin, the greatest American essayist, will be reprinted in 2015. I hope this is true. Leeming was Baldwin’s secretary, and this study was reportedly authorized before the writer’s death.
Walt Whitman: A Life , Justin Kaplan
I’ll admit that this prizewinning biography of Whitman is the only one I’ve read, but it is excellent. Then again, as the increasingly platitudinous and misunderstood line goes, Whitman “contains volumes.” So maybe it’s time to update. Suggestions?
Mark Twain: A Life , Ron Powers
Always held out as a kind of Celebrity King of Cautious Optimism, Twain was actually prone to episodes of intense despair. This book takes an unflinching look at the man who was arguably the father of American idiom.
Herman Melville: A Biography , Hershel Parker
Another multi-volume study, Parker’s Herman Melville follows the (by turns) fascinating and totally boring life of one of our great novelists. One of my favorite biographies for the way it demonstrates not how to fail better, but how to fail worse.
My Wars Are Laid Away in Books: The Life of Emily Dickinson , Alfred Habegger
There are several biographies of Dickinson battling it out, but Habegger’s should be read alongside other studies of her literary work, especially as a corrective after years of feminist study. The idea that Dickinson led a sedentary life is, I think, now an extinguished one.
Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius , Lawrence Jackson
This excellent example of archival scholarship was the first biography of Ralph Ellison, whose Invisible Man demands to be read now alongside recent works like Claudia Rankine’s Citizen .
Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self , Claire Tomalin
This “greatest diarist” in English gets the Tomalin treatment. Like the biographies of Montaigne and Boswell, this should be read for its meta-literary value.
Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow: The Tragic Courtship and Marriage of Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore: A History of Love and Violence Among the African American Elite , Eleanor Alexander
This biography of the love affair between between Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson — both relatively unknown American poets and writers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries — unearths a sadly lost chapter of American letters. And it suggests that we need additional biographical studies of both writers.
Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women , Harriet Reisen
Opiates, utopian dreams, economic difficulties, and later, huge success: the life of the author of Little Women was meticulously woven into her own books.
The Blue Hour: A Life of Jean Rhys , Lilian Pizzichini
Known almost exclusively for her (often emulated) novel Wide Sargasso Sea , Jean Rhys lived a long if intense, brutal, and fragile life, one that took her from Dominica to London and beyond.
Hawthorne: A Life , Brenda Wineapple
This is the best, or at least most readable, biography of Hawthorne I’ve encountered. Hawthorne was an aloof, enigmatic figure who often felt ashamed of his profession. Wineapple does him justice by teasing out the contradictions.
Sister Brother: Gertrude and Leo Stein , Brenda Wineapple
Wineapple, again, with one of the few biographies of Gertrude Stein. Here she charts Stein’s “suffocating” relationship with her brother Leo, who was himself an established collector of modern art.
The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D , James Boswell
This 1791 biography of Samuel Johnson takes countless liberties with its subject’s life. Nor was it actually the only biographical study of Johnson published at the time. It is censorious and even weird. But it is widely considered the foundation of literary biography.
Beautiful Shadow: A Life of Patricia Highsmith , Andrew Wilson
One of the strange examples of a writer who was intensely private but left behind a vast haul of private documents upon her death — the kind of artist that 21st-century documentarians routinely cling to — Highsmith left a mark on both queer fiction and crime narratives.
Emerson , Lawrence Buell
This is among the best biographies of Emerson, who became the benchmark for American intellectualism, but whom John Dewey called “the poet of ordinary days.” Especially poignant is Emerson’s reaction to the death of his son.
Alice Walker: A Life , Evelyn C. White
The only biography of a living writer on this list, Evelyn C. White’s study of Walker not only traces her beginnings as the daughter of sharecroppers in Georgia, it also records her enormous influence on American letters.
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Apr 12, 2019 · A life as strange as the stories he wrote: “It is sometimes an appropriate response to reality to go insane.” Richard Wright: The Life and Times by Hazel Rowley. This powerful story about the author of Native Son weaves Wright’s own writing and quotations into the biography. The Life of Emily Dickinson by Richard B. Sewall
A biography is an informational narrative and account of the life history of an individual person, written by someone who is not the subject of the biography. An autobiography is the story of an individual’s life, written by that individual. In general, an autobiography is presented chronologically with a focus on key events in the person’s ...
Dec 13, 2022 · The turbulent life of David Foster Wallace, author of that infamous classic, Infinite Jest, is demystified in D. T. Max’s Every Love Story Is a Ghost Story, the must-read literary biography of this important America scribe. The best biographies of writers sort through the gossip, the speculation, and the larger-than-life reputations of their ...
A biography (BYE-og-ruh-fee) is a written account of one person’s life authored by another person. A biography includes all pertinent details from the subject’s life, typically arranged in a chronological order. The word biography stems from the Latin biographia, which succinctly explains the word’s definition: bios = “life” + graphia = “write.”
In biography, the research methods like interviews, archives etc. have been used to study the subject’s life. It aims to give an objective account of the subject’s life and impact from a third-person perspective. Autobiography: It is written by the subject about their own life. Autobiography retells events from the first-person perspective ...
Jan 23, 2015 · Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston, Valerie Boyd. This beautiful work on the life of Zora Neal Hurston was the first definitive literary biography of the writer in a quarter century.