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Answer for the clue "Lives created in self-reliant way ", 15 letters:
autobiographies

Alternative clues for the word autobiographies

Word definitions for autobiographies in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (plural of autobiography English)

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Autobiography \Au`to*bi*og"ra*phy\, n.; pl. Autobiographies . A biography written by the subject of it; memoirs of one's life written by one's self.

Usage examples of autobiographies.

Reading this book or autobiographies should inspire you to write your own story.

Then, with Bentz, these autobiographies were discussed in groups, where each person learns to understand and control the "voices" from the past that influence her adult life.

Sociologists James Bossard and Eleanor Boll, after examining one hundred published autobiographies, found seventy-three in which the writers described procedures which were "unequivocally classifiable as family rituals.

To sharpen the individual's future-focused role image, students can be asked to write their own "future autobiographies" in which they picture themselves five, ten or twenty years in the future.

If children at fifteen, for example, are given the future autobiographies they themselves wrote at age twelve, they can see how maturation has altered their own images of the future.

I have always sneered at autobiographies and memoirs in which the writer appears at the beginning as a charming, knowing little fellow, possessed of insights and perceptions beyond his years.

Oh, these autobiographies in which the writer postures and simpers as a David Copperfield or a Huck Finn!

He came out of there, his sixth novel still unplaced, but with a new job, that of Special Director of the Tantalus Press, where he went on to work about a day a week, soliciting and marking up illiterate novels, total-recall autobiographies in which no one ever went anywhere or did anything, collections of primitive verse, very long laments for dead relatives (and pets and plants), crackpot scientific treatises and, increasingly, it seemed to him, "found" dramatic monologues about manic depression and schizophrenia.

The litany of names and autobiographies continues, the voices seeming remote and inconsequential, like background music.