Under a Friendly Spell

How friends influence us, for better and for worse, throughout life.

Me in Brief

Summing yourself up, in six words.

Speaking of self-documentation, how many words would you need to tell your life story? The longest autobiography my cursory search turned up is My Secret Life, by Anonymous. He filled 2,359 pages with details of his amorous conquests. "It could have been written by a computer fed to repletion by a sex-crazed programmer," wrote Time Magazine's reviewer in 1966.

In the brevity-is-the-soul-of-wit camp sits a new book, Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure.

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A few samples:

After Harvard, had baby with crackhead.
- Robin Templeton

70 years, few tears, hairy ears.
- Bill Querengesser

Watching quietly from every door frame.
- Nicole Resseguie

Savior complex makes for many disappointments.
- Alanna Schubach

    Boiling down one's life is an interesting exercise: Would you focus on a plot twist that shaped you, on a theme that's surfaced again and again across diverse circumstances, or on the defining aspects of your character? Getting yourself "right" in six words is probably much harder than penning a 61-pound memoir like Anonymous (Had many lovers. Wrote about them.)

 



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Carlin Flora is a journalist in New York City. She was a member of PT's staff from 2004-2011, most recently as Features Editor.

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