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The James Altucher Show

How to Write Your Own Best-Selling Autobiography: Part 2 – Crafting Your Life Story with Impact

The James Altucher Show

James Altucher

Society & Culture, Talk Radio, Writer, Philosophy, Comedy, Chess, How To, Entrepreneurship, Jay, James, The James Altucher Show, Altucher, Author, Jay Yow, Education, Jay The Engineer, Business, James Altucher

4.62.7K Ratings

🗓️ 18 April 2025

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Notes from James:

I don’t care if you’ve never written a word before—if you’ve lived, you have a story worth telling. The people who write the most impactful books aren’t the most famous or the best trained. They’re the ones who tell the truth with clarity and heart.

In this episode, I show you how to do exactly that. You’ll learn how to structure your life story for emotional and commercial impact, and how to weave in other stories, research, and personal growth without losing the power of your own voice.

Episode Description:

This episode picks up where Part 1: Why You Should Write Your Autobiography left off. If you haven’t listened to Part 1 yet, I highly encourage you to go back and start there first—it lays the essential groundwork for what we’re doing here.

In this (Part 2) episode, I walk you through how to identify the core of your story, pick the right style of memoir or hybrid book, and build your narrative around proven storytelling frameworks like the arc of the hero. I also introduce my “Six U’s” checklist for great autobiographical writing—so every page you write is unique, useful, urgent, unforgettable, uplifting, and universal.

Whether you’re writing a classic memoir, a hybrid self-help book, or an autobiographical novel, this episode gives you the exact structure you need to make it work.

Also—if you’re serious about writing and publishing your own book, check out my full course: Write and Publish a Book in 30 Days. It’s everything I’ve learned from writing over 25 books that have sold millions of copies.

This is the blueprint I’ve used for every bestselling book I’ve written. You’ve got the raw material. Now it’s time to build.

What You’ll Learn:

  • How to turn intersecting life moments into a compelling narrative
  • Why your story needs to follow the arc of the hero (and how to do it)
  • The Six U’s of great memoir writing—and how to apply them on every page
  • How to protect real people in your story without sacrificing truth
  • Why memory doesn’t matter as much as you think when writing your life story
  • How to turn your autobiography into a nonfiction bestseller (with examples from Limitless, Choose Yourself, Atomic Habits, and more)


Timestamps

00:00 Introduction to Autobiographical Writing

00:28 Finding Your Core Story

01:34 Types of Autobiographical Works

02:32 Example: Craig Stanley's 'Blank Canvas'

05:24 The Hero's Journey in Autobiography

14:23 The Six U's of Compelling Writing

21:58 The Universality of Autobiographical Stories

23:32 The Six U's of Autobiographical Writing

25:03 Analyzing a Memoir: Prozac Nation

26:31 Turning Your Autobiography into a Hybrid Book

34:08 The Importance of Memory in Autobiography

36:08 Ethical Considerations in Writing Autobiography

39:55 Using AI for Research and Inspiration

42:53 Final Encouragement and Next Steps

Books Mentioned

  • Blank Canvas by Craig Stanley
  • The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien
  • Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke
  • Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl
  • The Puzzler by A.J. Jacobs
  • Extreme Ownership by Jocko Willink
  • The Power of No by James Altucher
  • The Liars’ Club by Mary Karr
  • The Art of Memoir by Mary Karr
  • Quiet by Susan Cain
  • A Million Little Pieces by James Frey
  • Choose Yourself by James Altucher
  • 13 Things Mentally Strong People Don’t Do by Amy Morin
  • Losing the Nobel Prize by Brian Keating
  • The Art of Clear Thinking by Hasard Lee
  • When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi
  • Prozac Nation by Elizabeth Wurtzel
  • Limitless by Jim Kwik
  • The Talent Code by Daniel Coyle
  • Atomic Habits by James Clear
  • Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends on It by Kamal Ravikant

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You've learned a lot about the art of autobiography, but we're only just beginning now.

0:05.7

Now we learn how to write an autobiographical work.

0:14.6

This isn't your average business podcast, and he's not your average host.

0:19.9

This is the James Altitcher show.

0:28.0

So take the questions you answered on the difficult questions where you wrote about your

0:32.4

obstacles or your losses or the things you've grieved about or your addictions and so on. Find the ones that

0:40.2

intersect with the important events in your life, the most important people in your life. Intersect

0:45.1

that with the lessons you've learned and who you are now, why you are now, why now. Play around

0:51.5

with all the different intersections and see what resonates the most with you

0:54.8

and what you would like to really convey to readers. What is the most important story out of all

0:59.5

these intersections? Only you can know. You might have many, many stories. You might have one.

1:04.4

You might have to think about this for a while. Given all these possible intersections of

1:08.5

difficult experiences, lessons learned, people you

1:11.9

learn from, important events, and so on. And finally, who you are and why you are and why now.

1:19.1

What are the most important things you want to be able to convey to a reader and which of

1:25.5

these intersections of possibilities would be the story that does the best job

1:29.9

of conveying it. That is the core, the heart, the backbone of your autobiographical book.

1:36.8

And I say autobiographical book instead of autobiography, because again, maybe you write a memoir,

1:41.9

maybe you write a mini memoir, maybe you write a nonfiction book, maybe you write a memoir, maybe you write a mini memoir, maybe you write a nonfiction

1:44.6

book, maybe you write a hybrid book where it's about, again, puzzles or man search for meaning

1:51.8

or extreme ownership and you use your autobiographical stories as the backbone of the book.

1:58.2

That's all up to you. You get to decide what type of autobiographical work

...

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