Reading List · Lisanne Swart

The Best Celebrity Memoirs

Most celebrity memoirs are not really about fame. The best ones use fame as a lens through which to look at something harder: a childhood that left marks, a body that was never really yours, a version of yourself that the world decided on before you had a chance to. What makes these books worth reading is not who wrote them. It is what they were willing to say. These seven memoirs stayed with me — not because of the names on the cover, but because of what was underneath them. Each one earns its place not through spectacle but through honesty.

By Lisanne Swart · 7 books · Memoir · Updated May 2026


01

Memoir · Abuse & Recovery

I’m Glad My Mom Died

Jennette McCurdy · 2022 · Goodreads: 4.44 — 1.5M ratings 🎧 Narrated by Jennette

Jennette McCurdy grew up on Nickelodeon sets while her mother managed every part of her life — her diet, her career, her body, her relationships. The title sounds like provocation. By the time you finish the book, it reads like the most precise sentence she could have written. This is a memoir about a mother who called it love, and a daughter who spent years believing her.

What makes this book singular is how methodically McCurdy traces the mechanics of control — not as a villain story, but as a story about how coercion disguises itself as care. The most uncomfortable parts are not the worst moments. They are the ordinary ones, the everyday adjustments, the small surrenders that add up. It is one of the most honest accounts of a childhood written in recent years.

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02

Memoir · Identity & Race

Born a Crime

Trevor Noah · 2016 · Goodreads: 4.49 — 827K ratings 🎧 Narrated by Trevor

Trevor Noah was born illegal. In apartheid South Africa, the relationship between his Black mother and Swiss father was a criminal offense — and so, in the eyes of the law, was he. This is a book about growing up mixed-race in a country built to make that impossible, and about the particular kind of love it takes to raise a child under those conditions. Noah’s mother is, quietly, the person this whole book is about.

Born a Crime does something unusual for a celebrity memoir: it uses the author’s own story as a way into a larger argument about how systems shape individuals. The comedy is real but it is never a shield — Noah lets the difficult parts land. What stays with you is not the South Africa chapters or the famous name that comes later. It is the portrait of a woman who decided her son would not be defined by a country that did not want him.

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03

Memoir · Race & Womanhood

Finding Me

Viola Davis · 2022 · Goodreads: 4.53 — 190K ratings 🎧 Narrated by Viola

Viola Davis grew up in a house with no running water, in a town where hunger was not a metaphor. Long before she became one of the most decorated actors alive — the first Black woman to achieve the EGOT — she was a child in Rhode Island trying to survive a childhood that offered very little protection. This memoir covers all of it, from the poverty and violence of her early years to the shame she carried into adulthood and the work it took to set it down.

What distinguishes Finding Me from the standard Hollywood memoir is how little of it is about Hollywood. Davis treats her fame as a byproduct of something harder-won: the decision, made repeatedly, not to disappear. She writes about shame with the same precision she brings to a role — not to perform it, but to understand it. The result is one of the most substantive memoirs written by anyone in the entertainment industry.

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04

Memoir · Politics & Family

Becoming

Michelle Obama · 2018 · Goodreads: 4.44 — 1.2M ratings 🎧 Narrated by Michelle

Michelle Obama grew up on the South Side of Chicago in a small apartment above her great-aunt’s place, in a family where education was treated as both a right and a responsibility. Becoming traces her life from that beginning through Princeton, Harvard Law, a career on her own terms, and then eight years in a house she did not choose to live in. It is one of the best-selling memoirs ever published — and it earns that reach.

The White House sections are interesting. The Chicago sections are the book. Obama writes about class, race, ambition, and marriage with a clarity that the genre rarely produces — not because the topics are unusual, but because she does not simplify them. The portrait of her father, living with multiple sclerosis and refusing to slow down, is worth the whole book on its own.

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05

Memoir · Music & Grief

The Storyteller

Dave Grohl · 2021 · Goodreads: 4.64 — 70K ratings 🎧 Narrated by Dave

Dave Grohl has been at the center of two of the most important bands in rock history — first as Nirvana’s drummer, then as the founder of Foo Fighters. The Storyteller is structured as a series of episodes rather than a linear narrative: a night in a van in 1991, a conversation with Paul McCartney, the moment Kurt Cobain died. It reads the way someone tells a story at a kitchen table, which is exactly the point.

Most music memoirs mistake nostalgia for depth. This one does not. Grohl writes about grief, specifically the loss of Cobain, with a restraint that makes it more affecting than anything louder would be. He also writes about joy in a way that is genuinely rare in the genre — the specific, uncomplicated joy of someone who has spent thirty years doing the thing he wanted to do.

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06

Memoir · Acting & Legacy

Just as I Am

Cicely Tyson · 2021 · Goodreads: 4.70 🎧 Narrated by Tyson, Viola Davis & Robin Miles

Cicely Tyson published this memoir at 96, two weeks before she died. She had spent seven decades refusing roles that diminished Black women, at a time when that refusal cost her enormously. Just as I Am is the account of those decisions — why she made them, what they cost, and what she chose to build instead. It is also a love story, about her decades-long relationship with Miles Davis, told without sentimentality and without withholding.

There is a particular weight that comes from reading a memoir written by someone who knew they were writing their last words. Tyson does not use that weight for effect — she uses it for honesty. The chapters about her childhood in Harlem and her early years in the industry describe a world that no longer exists, and she documents it with the precision of someone who understood she was the last witness.

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07

Memoir · Theatre & Identity

Making It So

Patrick Stewart · 2023 · Goodreads: 4.60 — 70K ratings 🎧 Narrated by Patrick

Patrick Stewart grew up in a village in Yorkshire, the son of a father who came back from World War II changed in ways nobody spoke about, and a mother who bore the consequences. He became one of the most recognisable actors alive — Jean-Luc Picard, Professor X — but the memoir is more interested in the journey than the arrival. It covers his time at the Royal Shakespeare Company, his unlikely path to American television, and the domestic violence he witnessed as a child that he has spent decades speaking about publicly.

Making It So is useful precisely because Stewart treats theatre as a craft, not a backdrop. The chapters on the RSC and on learning to act from the inside out are some of the most technically interesting pages in any celebrity memoir. But what makes the book stay with you is the through-line from the frightened boy in Yorkshire to the man who decided that the story of his father was not something to be ashamed of.

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Not sure where to start?

If you want the memoir that is most direct about trauma and recovery, written with the least artifice
→ Start with I’m Glad My Mom Died. It is blunt in the way that only real honesty can be, and it moves fast. Most people finish it in a single sitting.

If you want something that uses a personal story to explain something larger — about race, about systems, about survival
→ Read Born a Crime. Trevor Noah’s mother is one of the most remarkable figures in recent memoir writing, and his story is impossible to put down.

If you want the most substantive writing on shame, ambition, and what it costs to refuse to disappear
→ Read Finding Me. Viola Davis writes about poverty and identity with the precision of someone who has spent decades studying both.

If you want a memoir from someone who understood they were writing their last words
→ Read Just as I Am. Cicely Tyson finished this book at 96. It shows.

Frequently asked questions about celebrity memoirs

What makes a celebrity memoir worth reading?
The best celebrity memoirs are not about fame — they use fame as a starting point. What distinguishes the ones worth reading is a willingness to write about the things that were true before the cameras arrived: childhood, family, failure, the version of yourself you carry that nobody else can see. High Goodreads ratings from a large number of readers are a useful signal, but the deciding factor is always whether the author is writing to understand something, not just to be understood.
What is the highest-rated celebrity memoir on Goodreads?
Among widely-read celebrity memoirs, Cicely Tyson’s Just as I Am holds one of the highest ratings at 4.70. Dave Grohl’s The Storyteller follows at 4.64, and Viola Davis’s Finding Me sits at 4.53. Trevor Noah’s Born a Crime rates 4.49 across more than 800,000 readers — making it one of the most-rated memoirs in the genre. All books on this list carry a Goodreads rating above 4.4.
Which celebrity memoir should I read first if I don’t usually read memoirs?
Start with I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy or Born a Crime by Trevor Noah. Both read quickly, both are structured in short chapters, and both have a narrative momentum that feels closer to a novel than a traditional memoir. They are also the two books on this list most likely to convert someone who thinks they do not enjoy the genre.
Are celebrity memoirs actually written by the celebrities themselves?
It varies. Some of the best ones — I’m Glad My Mom Died, Finding Me, Just as I Am — are written by the authors themselves, which usually shows in the quality and specificity of the prose. Others use ghostwriters or co-writers, which does not automatically reduce quality: Born a Crime was written with the help of a collaborator and remains one of the finest memoirs of the past decade. What matters is whether the voice feels earned and whether the material is honest.
What is the best celebrity memoir about music?
Dave Grohl’s The Storyteller is the strongest music memoir on this list — it treats the craft of making music seriously without becoming technical, and it handles grief with unusual restraint. For an older classic, Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run (4.35, 150,000+ Goodreads ratings) is worth reading alongside it. Both are books about what music asks of the people who give their lives to it.
Which celebrity memoir has sold the most copies?
Michelle Obama’s Becoming is the bestselling memoir on this list and one of the bestselling memoirs ever published, with over 17 million copies sold worldwide. Prince Harry’s Spare holds the record for fastest-selling non-fiction book in history on its release date, though its Goodreads rating sits below 4.0. Sales and quality do not always track together — this list prioritises the latter.

From the bookshelf

“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.” — Maya Angelou

If this list resonated with you, you'll find more books like these on my personal bookshelf — hand-picked for readers who want books that stay with them long after the last page.

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