Legacy in Contemporary and General Fiction
Legacy isn’t usually grand or formal — it lives quietly in everyday moments and relationships, and contemporary and general fiction are especially good at capturing this gentle, human kind of legacy.
Legacy isn’t usually grand or formal — it lives quietly in everyday moments and relationships, and contemporary and general fiction are especially good at capturing this gentle, human kind of legacy.
World Cancer Day reminds us that while cancer touches millions, no two journeys are the same. The global theme for 2025–2027 — United by Unique — is a reminder that every story carries its own weight, its own rhythm, its own truth. Your experience is singular. And yet, in the sharing of it, we stand together.
AI is a tool that was supposed to make writing easier yet somehow made that small whisper of “Am I really a writer?” louder. Not because AI is dangerous or because ‘it can steal your story’. But because it taps directly into one of the tenderest parts of the writing heart: The fear that we are not enough.
Books begin in solitude. They are written in stolen hours, late nights, lunch breaks, and the backseat of cars while waiting to pick someone up. They are scribbled beside hospital beds, on commuter trains, or in the liminal space between “I don’t know if I can do this” and “I’m doing it anyway.” But a launch? That’s when the book steps into the world and says, “I’m ready to meet someone other than my author.
When we try to write memory, we often get stuck because we think we need perfect recall. We worry. Was the couch blue or grey? Did that conversation happen before or after dinner? Was that 1997 or 1998? But memory doesn’t work in timelines. It works in sensations — in atmosphere, tone, and emotional imprint. Your reader doesn’t need every factual detail to be exact. They need the scene to feel true.
How do writers like Hannah Gadsby, Lindy West, and Jenny Lawson talk about trauma, sexism, or mental health and still make you snort into your coffee? The answer lies in understanding that laughter doesn’t erase the hard stuff — it simply makes space for it.
In this guide, I’m going to walk you through what legacy writing can look like for those of us who don’t identify as professional writers, and how you can approach this project with confidence, whether you’re leading a business, nurturing a family, or caring for someone else.
Perfection is the enemy of beginnings. Many would-be memoirists stall because they think they have to craft the “perfect” first sentence or open at the “right” chronological point. Truth is, the first words you write may not even make it into the final manuscript.
Some memoirists blend first and third person — using first for deeply personal scenes and third for context or distance. Done well, this can offer intimacy and perspective. Done poorly, it can read like two different books stitched together.
Too many people dismiss the idea of writing their personal story with phrases like, “Nothing exciting ever happened to me.” But if you’ve ever loved, lost, doubted, hoped, grown, or simply paused to watch sunlight hit the kitchen floor — you have something worth writing about.