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Revision as of 21:09, 11 September 2014
Could I take your name and number, please? <a href=" http://www.proficeo.com/2011/ ">cheap finpecia wy</a> This, really, is the point of the How To: Academy’s two courses: “Write a Memoir for Your Family” and “Write Your Family History”. The first will largely concentrate on marshalling memories and stories to provide a personal account for your immediate family, while the latter will go back beyond living memory and involve making the best of your researches; but both approaches rely on creating a narrative. Using internet tools, it is now comparatively easy to construct a family tree, but this is not the same thing as a family history. We can consult all the census returns, parish records, registrations of births, marriages and deaths we like, but names, dates and places do not make a story – and it is family stories we crave. Shakespeare’s history plays are at one level the family story of the Plantagenets; Jane Austen’s novels are concerned with property, marriages and vile relatives; many of Dickens’s plots hinge on family connections; popular television dramas from Downton Abbey to EastEnders are family sagas.