Most people when they have autobiographies, they're not autobiographies, they're biographies written by a ghost writer.
Autobiographies tell more lies than all but the most self-indulgent fiction.
Autobiographies, for the most part, to me, are like writing a love letter to yourself.
As a business consultant, I am a voracious reader of self-help books, case studies of thriving companies, and the biographies and autobiographies of the world's most successful people. I relentlessly implement the best ideas into my businesses.
I read autobiographies because there is too much fiction in my life.
One of the autobiographies I really liked was Bob Dylan's. It was interesting because he didn't do it in a linear fashion.
Autobiographies give you the picture of the person behind the image on screen, because that's never really you.
I am a very honest, open person and I think there is a tendency in celebrity autobiographies to gloss over certain things which have happened.
Unfortunately, creative people are at their most creative when writing their autobiographies.
All autobiographies are alibi-ographies.
I like to read. Autobiographies.
I love memoirs and autobiographies in general.
I do like reading autobiographies, if I'm honest.
Don't see the point in reading ghost-written autobiographies, even though some of these published lives may fascinate me. The 'ghost' is always present, manipulating an interview into first-person singular text, and it feels like I'm reading a lie.
I like autobiographies. I wouldn't mind making one of those.
I haven't read any of the autobiographies about me.