Memoir is mostly a memory and material problem. The story you want to tell is held together by things — voice memos you recorded years ago, family photographs, letters, a journal you kept for two years in your twenties, the recording of your mother talking about her own childhood. Most of it lives in different places. By the time you sit down to write the chapter, finding the right memory takes longer than writing the scene.

This guide is about putting the source material — recordings, photos, journals, interviews with family, the half-formed scenes you've sketched out — into one vault. The writing still happens. The hunt for the material doesn't take half the work session.

## What a memoir's notes actually have to hold

Memoir work has a shape that's different from other long-form writing. The book isn't outlined and then drafted in order. You write a scene that surfaces a memory, which surfaces another scene, which becomes a chapter — and the chapters re-arrange themselves over a year of work. The notes have to support that drift.

Four loads a memoir vault has to carry:

- **Source material** — voice memos, family interviews, photos, letters, journals, documents. The raw stuff that triggers and grounds the writing.
- **Scenes** — the small memories you've sketched out. Some become chapters, some get folded into others, some get cut.
- **Chapters in progress** — the actual draft pages, organized loosely until the structure becomes clear.
- **A research file** — historical context for the time and place you're writing about, things you needed to look up.

A vault holds all four together. Plain markdown for the text. Audio transcribed with speaker labels — useful for family interviews where you want to know who said what. PDFs (a court record, a school transcript, a passport scan) auto-converted to searchable text. The structural shape overlaps with what we describe in [AI notes for creative projects](/guides/creatives-content/ai-notes-creative-projects/) — same scaffolding, different output at the end.

## Source material as the bedrock

The thing memoir runs on is material. Memory is unreliable; material is what corrects it. The voice memo you recorded after your father's funeral. The cassette tape of your grandmother that someone digitized. The shoebox of letters from the year you moved across the country. The journal entries from when you were sixteen.

Drop all of it into the vault. Audio gets transcribed with speaker labels. The cassette of your grandmother becomes searchable text — you can ask the agent later, "Find every time my grandmother talks about her father in the recording." That's a question that's nearly impossible to answer when the material is forty-five minutes of audio you keep meaning to relisten to.

Photographs go on a page with a caption. Not just the date and place — what you remember about the moment, what you've been told about it, who's in it. The photo plus the caption becomes a writing prompt. Six months from now when you're working on a chapter about that summer, the page exists and the memory has been written down.

For documents — letters, school records, a passport you found, the obituary your aunt wrote — drop the PDF on a page. It auto-converts to markdown via docstrange. The text is searchable. You can ask the agent: "Pull every letter in the vault that mentions the move to Detroit. Sort by date." The detail you'd need an afternoon to dig out comes back in seconds.

## Family interviews and the speaker-label dividend

Many memoirs are also research projects. You interview a parent, an aunt, a grandparent. You record because the memory is fragile and the interview can't be re-run.

Drop the recording onto a page in the vault. Speaker diarization labels who said what — useful when an interview has multiple voices, especially when you're cross-referencing across interviews. The transcript lives next to the audio.

When you're writing the chapter that draws on the interview, you don't relisten to forty minutes of audio. You ask the agent: "In the interview with my mother from 2024, find the section where she talks about the kitchen in their first apartment. Pull the relevant exchanges." You get the moment, in plain text, with her voice attributed. Then you write the scene, with the actual material in front of you.

For interviews where the most useful moment is something said in passing — a detail, a phrase, a contradiction with another family member's version — the searchability is what makes it findable. Without the transcript, the moment is lost the second the recording ends.

A discipline that pays off: after each interview, type three lines about what surprised you, what felt incomplete, and what you should follow up on. Those three lines become the prep for the next conversation when you have time for one.

## Scenes — the basic unit of memoir writing

The basic unit of memoir isn't the chapter. It's the scene. The afternoon. The argument. The drive home. The morning of the diagnosis. The first time you saw the apartment.

Sketch each scene on its own page as it occurs to you. The page doesn't need to be polished — three sentences is enough. The scene's name, where and when it happened, the rough shape of what you remember, and any source material that's connected (a photograph, an audio file, a letter).

Over months, the vault accumulates dozens of scene pages. Some belong together in chapters. Some are duplicates that you remembered twice, three years apart, with different details — the differences themselves are useful. Some don't belong in the book at all but were worth writing down.

The agent helps with the structural work. "Read all the scene pages. Group them by approximate time period. For each group, suggest which scenes might belong in the same chapter and what the chapter's throughline could be." You get a draft of an outline. You ignore most of the suggestions and accept two of them — but the structural work was triggered, and you're not staring at fifty unsorted scenes.

For scenes that appear in multiple time periods or recur across the book, a tag system helps. The kitchen of the first apartment shows up in three different scenes — link them. The agent can find them later: "Pull every scene that takes place in the first apartment. Order by approximate date." That's the chapter sketch starting to assemble itself.

## Chapters in progress — the draft surface

Once you have enough scenes to start a chapter, it gets its own page. The page holds the working title, a sentence about what the chapter is doing in the book, links to the scenes it draws on, links to the source material, and the actual draft.

The draft happens in markdown. No fancy formatting, no proprietary file format. Plain text the agent can read. As the chapter develops, the page grows. Old versions of paragraphs get moved to a "cuts" section at the bottom rather than deleted — sometimes the cut paragraph is the one that becomes the next chapter's opening.

The agent helps with the structural work that's hard staring at the page. "Read the chapter draft and the source material it references. Where does the chapter slow down? Are there moments that feel told rather than shown? What's the strongest scene, and is it in the right place?" You get observations to react to. Most you ignore. One is useful. That's the value.

For pacing, ask the agent to compare. "Read the last three chapters. Which one has the most concrete sensory detail? Where does the prose get abstract for too long?" Getting a real comparative read on your own draft from outside your own head, while writing, is hard. The agent does that part.

## Research, motifs, and the discipline about truth

Memoir is set somewhere and somewhen. The 1970s in suburban Cleveland. A small Indian town in the years after independence. The setting has to be accurate. A "Research" sub-vault holds the historical context — articles, books, photographs of the era, music that places the time. Drop in PDFs; they auto-convert to text. When you're writing a scene set in 1973 and you need to remember what cars looked like, the agent reads the research file: "Pull what we know about 1973. List the cultural references that would be authentic to a teenager that year."

A memoir over time develops echoes. The recurring image, the repeated phrase, the pattern across decades you didn't notice when you wrote each scene separately. The agent finds them: "Pull every scene that mentions my father's hands. Find every time water shows up." Some echoes are worth turning into deliberate motifs. Some are accidental repetition that should be cut. A "Motifs" page tracks the threads as they emerge.

A practical note: memoir involves the truth, and the truth in memoir is complicated. The vault holds source material, transcripts, and your own scenes — but the book is yours, and the responsibility for what gets included, what gets changed, what gets quoted directly, and what gets blurred for privacy is yours. The vault makes the material easier to find. It doesn't decide what's in the book. For the discipline of writing across long projects with many sources, you may also want to read [AI notes for creative projects](/guides/creatives-content/ai-notes-creative-projects/) for the broader workflow.

## A vault you stay in

Memoir is slow work. The book takes years. The vault has to support the long arc — the months when you're not writing, the periods when you're only collecting, the burst when a chapter falls into place over a week. The system can't be high-maintenance or it dies during the slow stretches.

The shape that works: drop material in whenever, in whatever form. Sketch scenes when they occur. Write chapters when you have a working hour. Once a week, do a short pass — what came in, what's ready to develop, what's a duplicate. The agent handles the searching and the structural reading. You handle the writing and the judgment.

Try Docapybara free — [sign up](/accounts/signup/), drop in one voice memo, three photographs, and a sketch of one scene you want to write, then ask the agent what other scenes in your existing notes might belong in the same chapter.