Chapters of Life

Preserving the Past ~ One Family's Story at a Time

Family Memory Book

Written By: Chapters of Life

A family memory book offers a unique opportunity to bring together the stories of your family in one beautifully bound book. Your family will cherish it for generations as the people, places and events come to life for all who read it. Our family memory book combines the precious stories captured through oral history interviews with old photos and memorabilia to create a well-written, beautifully designed hardbound keepsake book for generations to treasure.

Sarah Book Cover Cropped smllr copy

 

Julie did a very wonderful “Rosie the Riveter” book and followed up with her Chapters of Life® history book.  She set up five interviews at my home. With the information she received after each interview, I came up with the photos, newspaper articles, certificates for her to use. Also Julie did a lot of research to add to my book. 

Julie really knows how to put the information together to make very interesting, knowledgeable material. Those who have read my wonderful 

book have awesome comments. (They want to own one.) They love it— love Mom and Dad’s stories.  I will always treasure my book and all who own it will too. 

Sarah Ciranny Zopolos, Oct. 5, 2007

A family memory book can be written in first-person narratives, third-person narratives or a more formal (but often less readable) question-and-answer format. Information for these stories comes directly from the interview transcripts, which are edited and organized to create a narrative that flows smoothly from start to finish.

Your family photos and memorabilia are scanned on quality equipment, then stored on a computer hard drive and inserted into the book wherever they best illustrate the stories.

We can print the pages of the book in full color or black and white. We work with clients to create catchy titles that illustrate the life story captured inside the book. We can print and bind as many books as the client desires.

You may find our free article 13 Reasons to Create a Memoir interesting as you explore this exciting idea.

June's book page 102Julie is a very thoughtful caring person and she demonstrates this during her interviews. She goes that extra mile to make an interesting story even more eventful by taking pictures of places of important events. You won’t be disappointed if you have Julie do your memory book.

June Squires, August 7, 2002

What to Expect

After receiving your call, we meet with you to show samples of the work we’ve done and discuss just what you would like to see in a finished product. We provide you with a biographical information sheet to fill out and mail to us, so that our interviewer is well prepared to ask intelligent questions to inspire thoughtful reminisces by the narrator (you or whoever is sharing stories).

I love to hear stories about our heritage. The pictures and stories make it all come to life.
 
Francie Cooney, St. Louis
 
The Chapters of Life book is a treasure! Our children love to have me read the stories before bed. We will cherish this book, one generation after another! What a wonderful gift!
Cathleen Cooney, St. Louis

During the first interview, we converse casually with the narrator to create a warm and comfortable rapport. We explain the interviewing process and assure the narrators that we genuinely want to hear the stories they will share.

We find a quiet and comfortable spot in the home to set up the recording equipment. We clip a lapel microphone to the narrator’s clothing to ensure those precious memories are recorded clearly on our high-end, unobtrusive equipment. We clearly ask brief, specific questions that trigger memories and start the stories flowing.

Focusing on the narrator at all times, we remain attuned to signs that the narrator may be tiring or might prefer a change of subject. We are always honored and humbled when narrators share their precious memories with us, and we let the narrator know how much we value them and the wisdom they’ve gained through their life’s journey.
All material entrusted to us is returned untarnished in the condition received. We care for your historical keepsakes as if they were our own.We help the narrator sort through photos and other memorabilia, which we store in a fire-safe container to ensure the safety of those precious keepsakes when we borrow them for scanning. We scan photos, slides and other memorabilia on high-end equipment, then save them to several computer hard drives and backup files on CD-roms.

Read more ab

Optionsout our process.

 

Family memory books can be long, at times more than 250 pages, or much shorter, perhaps 50 to 80 pages. The length of the book depends on the number of interviews, the number of people interviewed, and the willingness of the narrator or narrators to share stories.

Julie has great talent in getting the story out! Her work shows originality. Her research skills are great.
 Paul Justice, Centralia, October 2009

A family memory book can focus on a family’s general history or a special chapter of a family’s life, such as a immigration, childhood years, reunions, exotic trips, or courtships and marriages.

If someone has already passed away, we can interview family members and friends to capture the stories of the loved one’s life, and then retell those stories within the pages of the family memory book, illustrated with photos.

Most books contain anywhere from 50 to 250 photos, depending on what you desire. They are printed on acid-free paper, trimmed in a predetermined size—5×8, 6×9, 7×10, 8½x11—whatever size you prefer. T

Paperback Justice cover copy

he books can be paperback or case-bound using quality endpapers.

Payments are accepted in separate installments, corresponding to different stages throughout the steps of interviewing, editing, and book production.

Getting Started

After meeting to discuss your proposed project, we will provide you with a biographical information form to gather the basic factual details about the family’s information. We also will better define the desired memory book. Filling out the biographical information form helps us avoid unnecessarily frustrating a narrator during an interview with questions about dates, spellings, and other factual details.

When meeting for the interview, we will arrive on time, quickly establish rapport, and ensure the comfort of the narrator and quietness of the interview setting. Then we’ll settle down for a friendly “chat.” Although perhaps feeling a bit uneasy at first, narrators begin to relax during the interviews as it becomes clear how much we relish hearing their stories of the past.

We always bring narrators back to the present when winding up the interview, by scheduling the next session or perhaps discussing current events.

Cover for Loretta Bell Downey book smlr copy

My mom came from a large family and experienced the Great Depression as a very young child and it had a profound effect on her life, but it was something she never had much to say about as her three boys were growing up.  My dad was only a year older and passed away at 61 years.  It wasn’t until Mom was in her 80s that our youngest boy started asking questions and wanting to know some history.  He tried asking questions, but she either didn’t remember or was reluctant to talk about it much.  We finally had to “gently persuade” her to let Julie write her story.  Julie worked with her and her two remaining siblings to get enough questions answered to put together a beautiful book which Mom is quite pleased with.  Of course, we think it is awesome.  The sad part is that we didn’t do it 10 or 15 years earlier.  We hadn’t really realized or acknowledged how much Mom really didn’t remember!  You see, by the time we contacted Julie, Mom already was experiencing the onset of Alzheimer’s.  Thankfully, Mom is still mostly able to function on her own, but I would certainly encourage anyone to get your family history written now.  Don’t put it off or it will be gone forever.
 
William “Bill” Downey, Chehalis, April 15, 2011

Samples of Family Memory Books

Have you read about oral histories and spiritual legacies? Learn more about Julie Zander, or contact us to order your family memory book.family_grp