From Mahatma Gandhi’s The Story of My Experiments with Truth to Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom and A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s Wings of Fire, famous autobiographies offer direct accounts of remarkable lives — and are a consistently tested topic in every major competitive exam.

The Books & Authors section of UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Railways, Banking Awareness, and State PSC exams regularly features autobiographies. This page covers 44+ must-know autobiographies of Indian and world leaders, scientists, sportspersons, and literary figures — with MCQs, flashcards, and memory tips.

Gujarati Gandhi’s Autobiography — Original Language
1934–35 Nehru Wrote His Autobiography — While in Prison
Wings of Fire Kalam’s Autobiography (co-author: Arun Tiwari)
Robben Island Where Mandela Secretly Wrote Long Walk to Freedom

⚡ Quick Facts

Must-Know Facts for Exams
  • Gandhi’s autobiography — originally written in Gujarati; English title: The Story of My Experiments with Truth; covers life up to 1921.
  • A.P.J. Abdul Kalam — Wings of Fire — co-authored with Arun Tiwari; traces his journey from Rameswaram to India’s missile programme.
  • Nelson Mandela — Long Walk to Freedom — written secretly while imprisoned on Robben Island; manuscript buried in prison garden.
  • Jawaharlal Nehru — An Autobiography — written in prison (Almora Jail, 1934–35); also called Toward Freedom.
  • Sachin Tendulkar — Playing It My Way — co-authored with Boria Majumdar; bestselling Indian sports autobiography.
⚠️ Common Exam Trap

Nehru’s “The Discovery of India” is NOT an autobiography — it is a historical and cultural survey of India. His autobiography is An Autobiography (1936). Also: Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson is a BIOGRAPHY (written by Isaacson), not an autobiography by Jobs. And Wings of Fire is Kalam’s TRUE autobiography — Ignited Minds and India 2020 are motivational/policy books, not autobiographies. Most-Tested Traps

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📚 Famous Autobiographies — Complete List

🔍
# ↕ Title ↕ Author Year ↕ Field Key Exam Fact
1 The Story of My Experiments with Truth Mahatma Gandhi 1927–29 Freedom Movement Originally in Gujarati; covers life up to 1921; most tested Indian autobiography Hot
2 An Autobiography (Toward Freedom) Jawaharlal Nehru 1936 Freedom Movement / Politics Written in Almora Jail (1934–35); covers early life and freedom struggle Hot
3 An Indian Pilgrim Subhas Chandra Bose 1948 (Posthumous) Freedom Movement Posthumously published; also wrote The Indian Struggle (1920–1942)
4 Waiting for a Visa Dr. B.R. Ambedkar 1935–36 (pub. posthumously) Social Reform Account of caste discrimination faced by Ambedkar; important social reform autobiography Hot
5 India Wins Freedom Maulana Abul Kalam Azad 1959 Freedom Movement / Politics Partition of India and independence; Azad was India’s first Education Minister
6 Young India Lala Lajpat Rai 1916 Freedom Movement “Lion of Punjab”; nationalist leader; also wrote Unhappy India
7 My Truth Indira Gandhi 1980 Politics India’s first female PM; compiled from interviews; autobiographical memoir
8 An Autobiography Dr. Rajendra Prasad 1957 Politics First President of India; memoir of freedom struggle and public life
9 My Presidential Years R. Venkataraman 1994 Politics Memoir of India’s 8th President (1987–1992)
10 Wings of Fire A.P.J. Abdul Kalam (with Arun Tiwari) 1999 Science / Politics Co-authored with Arun Tiwari; Rameswaram to Missile Man of India Hot
11 Playing It My Way Sachin Tendulkar (with Boria Majumdar) 2014 Sports — Cricket Co-authored with Boria Majumdar; bestselling Indian sports autobiography Hot
12 A Shot at History Abhinav Bindra (with Rohit Brijnath) 2011 Sports — Shooting India’s first individual Olympic gold (10m Air Rifle, Beijing 2008) Hot
13 Unbreakable Mary Kom 2013 Sports — Boxing 6-time World Amateur Boxing Champion; Manipur; film adaptation 2014 Hot
14 The Test of My Life Yuvraj Singh 2013 Sports — Cricket Account of his battle with cancer and return to cricket; 2011 World Cup Player of Tournament
15 Straight from the Heart Kapil Dev 1999 Sports — Cricket 1983 World Cup winning captain; India’s greatest all-rounder
16 The Racket Sania Mirza 2016 Sports — Tennis India’s top women’s tennis player; Grand Slam doubles titles
17 My Music, My Life Ravi Shankar 1968 Music Sitar maestro; global ambassador of Indian classical music
18 The Country of First Boys Amartya Sen 2015 Economics / Literature Memoir and essays by Nobel Economics laureate (1998)
19 My Story Kamala Das 1976 Literature Bold autobiographical account; original in Malayalam; known as “Madhavikutty”
20 Romancing with Life Dev Anand 2007 Cinema Legendary Bollywood actor; covered his entire cinematic journey
21 Citizen and Society Hamid Ansari 2016 Politics Memoir of India’s 12th Vice President; former diplomat
22 Freedom from Fear Aung San Suu Kyi 1991 Politics Myanmar’s democracy icon; Nobel Peace Prize 1991; partly autobiographical essays
23 Long Walk to Freedom Nelson Mandela 1994 Politics Written secretly on Robben Island; manuscript buried; anti-apartheid icon Hot
24 The Diary of a Young Girl Anne Frank 1947 (Posthumous) Literature / History Holocaust diary (1942–44); published posthumously; among world’s most-read personal accounts Hot
25 I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings Maya Angelou 1969 Literature First of seven autobiographies; African-American poet and civil rights activist
26 The Autobiography of Malcolm X Malcolm X (with Alex Haley) 1965 Civil Rights Black nationalist leader; co-authored with Alex Haley; published posthumously
27 I Am Malala Malala Yousafzai 2013 Social Reform / Education Taliban attack and advocacy for girls’ education; youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner (age 17) Hot
28 A Promised Land Barack Obama 2020 Politics First volume of Obama’s presidential memoir; bestseller 2020 Hot
29 Becoming Michelle Obama 2018 Politics / Memoir Former US First Lady; one of the bestselling autobiographies of all time Hot
30 The Story of My Life Helen Keller 1903 Social Reform Deaf-blind American activist and author; icon of overcoming disability
31 My Own Story Emmeline Pankhurst 1914 Social Reform Suffragette leader; fought for women’s voting rights in UK
32 The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Franklin 1791 (Posthumous) Politics / Science US Founding Father; classic autobiography; unfinished at his death
33 Open Andre Agassi (with J.R. Moehringer) 2009 Sports — Tennis Candid memoir of tennis champion; revealed he hated tennis; bestseller
34 Shoe Dog Phil Knight 2016 Business Nike founder’s memoir; origin story of one of the world’s most iconic brands
35 Mein Kampf Adolf Hitler 1925 Politics (Historical) Controversial political autobiography; historically significant; Nazi Germany context
36 Out of Africa Karen Blixen 1937 Literature Memoir of life in Kenya; Nobel Prize nominated; adapted into Oscar-winning film
37 Spare Prince Harry (Duke of Sussex) 2023 Memoir Global bestseller 2023; controversially reveals Royal Family details Hot
38 Azhar Mohammad Azharuddin 2014 Sports — Cricket Former Indian cricket captain; controversial career; film adaptation 2016
39 Golden Threshold Sarojini Naidu 1905 Literature / Politics “Nightingale of India”; freedom fighter; first female President of INC
40 An Autobiography Annie Besant 1893 Politics / Social Reform Theosophical Society leader; Indian Home Rule Movement; British-born, Indian nationalist
41 Gita Rahasya Bal Gangadhar Tilak 1915 Philosophy / Freedom Philosophical memoir written in Mandalay Prison; “Lokmanya Tilak”; Marathi edition famous
42 Dreams from My Father Barack Obama 1995 Politics Obama’s first memoir (NOT presidential); covers identity and early life; different from A Promised Land
43 Kitchen Confidential Anthony Bourdain 2000 Culinary / Memoir Behind-the-scenes memoir of the restaurant world; spawned a TV career
44 Living History Hillary Clinton 2003 Politics Former US First Lady and Secretary of State; covers her White House years
No autobiographies match your filter.
⚔️ Indian Freedom Fighters — Autobiography Quick Reference
# Author Title Year Key Fact
1Mahatma GandhiThe Story of My Experiments with Truth1927–29Written in Gujarati; most tested Indian autobiography Hot
2Jawaharlal NehruAn Autobiography (Toward Freedom)1936Written in Almora Jail 1934–35 Hot
3Subhas Chandra BoseAn Indian Pilgrim1948 (Posthumous)Also wrote The Indian Struggle (1920–1942)
4Dr. B.R. AmbedkarWaiting for a Visa1935–36Caste discrimination account; published posthumously Hot
5Lala Lajpat RaiYoung India1916“Lion of Punjab”
6Bal Gangadhar TilakGita Rahasya1915Philosophical memoir; written in Mandalay Prison
7Maulana Abul Kalam AzadIndia Wins Freedom1959Partition and independence; India’s first Education Minister
8Sarojini NaiduGolden Threshold1905“Nightingale of India”; first female President of INC
9Annie BesantAn Autobiography1893Theosophical Society; Indian Home Rule Movement
📖 Jawaharlal Nehru’s Three Prison Books — Critical Distinction
Book Year Nature Key Fact
An Autobiography (Toward Freedom)1936✅ AutobiographyWritten in Almora Jail 1934–35; covers early life and freedom struggle Hot
Glimpses of World History1934✅ History (letters to Indira)196 letters to daughter Indira from prison; world history survey
The Discovery of India1946❌ NOT an autobiographyHistorical and cultural survey of India — NOT an autobiography; most commonly confused Hot

⚖️ Compare Two Autobiographies

Select two autobiographies to compare
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📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips

Note 1 — Most Tested Indian Autobiographies

The five most tested Indian autobiographies in competitive exams: Gandhi’s The Story of My Experiments with Truth (Gujarati original; covers life up to 1921), Nehru’s An Autobiography (written in Almora Jail 1934–35), Kalam’s Wings of Fire (co-authored with Arun Tiwari, 1999), Tendulkar’s Playing It My Way (co-authored with Boria Majumdar, 2014), and Mary Kom’s Unbreakable (2013). For each, know: full title, author, one distinguishing fact.

Note 2 — Nehru’s Three Prison Books: Critical Distinction
  • An Autobiography (Toward Freedom) — 1936; TRUE autobiography; written in Almora Jail 1934–35
  • Glimpses of World History — 1934; NOT autobiography; 196 letters to daughter Indira from prison; world history
  • The Discovery of India — 1946; NOT an autobiography; historical and cultural survey of India
  • Exam trap: “Which of Nehru’s books is NOT an autobiography?” → Answer: The Discovery of India
Note 3 — Biography vs Autobiography: A Frequently Tested Distinction
  • Autobiography = written BY the person about their own life (e.g., Wings of Fire by Kalam)
  • Biography = written BY someone else about another person (e.g., Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson — NOT an autobiography)
  • Co-authored autobiographies are still autobiographies: Playing It My Way (Tendulkar with Boria Majumdar), Wings of Fire (Kalam with Arun Tiwari)
  • Obama’s two memoirs: Dreams from My Father (1995, early life) vs A Promised Land (2020, presidential memoir) — these are two different books, often confused
Note 4 — International Autobiographies: Key Distinguishing Facts
  • Mandela — Long Walk to Freedom: Written secretly on Robben Island; manuscript buried in prison garden to hide from authorities; published 1994
  • Anne Frank — The Diary of a Young Girl: Actually a diary (not traditional autobiography); written 1942–44 during Nazi occupation; published posthumously 1947
  • Malala — I Am Malala: Co-authored with Christina Lamb; published 2013; youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner (age 17, 2014)
  • Michelle Obama — Becoming (2018): One of the bestselling autobiographies of all time; distinct from Barack Obama’s books
🧠 Mnemonic — Key Indian Autobiography Pairings

“Gandhi Experiments, Nehru Struggles, Kalam Fires, Tendulkar Plays, Kom Breaks”

  • Gandhi → Experiments with Truth (Gujarati)
  • Nehru → An Autobiography / Toward Freedom (in prison)
  • Kalam → Wings of Fire (co-author: Arun Tiwari)
  • Tendulkar → Playing It My Way (co-author: Boria Majumdar)
  • Mary Kom → Unbreakable (Manipur boxer)

🃏 Flashcards

Flashcards — Famous Autobiographies

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Question
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Card 1 of 5

🧩 Practice Quiz

Famous Autobiographies — MCQ Quiz

5 questions · Answer all · Check your score

Question 1 of 5
Mahatma Gandhi’s autobiography was originally written in which language?
A. English
B. Hindi
C. Gujarati
D. Marathi
✅ Explanation

Mahatma Gandhi wrote his autobiography in Gujarati, titled “Satya na Prayogo athva Atmakatha.” It was later translated into English as The Story of My Experiments with Truth and remains the most tested Indian autobiography in competitive exams. The autobiography covers his life up to 1921, published in two volumes (1927 and 1929).

Question 2 of 5
Which book by A.P.J. Abdul Kalam is his autobiography, co-authored with Arun Tiwari?
A. Ignited Minds
B. India 2020
C. Wings of Fire
D. My Journey
✅ Explanation

Wings of Fire (1999) is A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s autobiography co-authored with Arun Tiwari. It traces his journey from a modest background in Rameswaram, Tamil Nadu, to becoming the “Missile Man of India” and later the 11th President. Ignited Minds (2002) is a motivational manifesto — NOT an autobiography. India 2020 is a policy vision book. Only Wings of Fire qualifies as a true autobiography.

Question 3 of 5
Jawaharlal Nehru’s An Autobiography was written while he was:
A. Serving as Prime Minister
B. On a diplomatic tour to England
C. Imprisoned by the British
D. Attending the Round Table Conference
✅ Explanation

Nehru wrote An Autobiography (also titled Toward Freedom) during his imprisonment at Almora Jail in 1934–35. It was published in 1936 and covers his early life, education, and involvement in the freedom struggle. Note that Nehru’s The Discovery of India (1946) — often confused with his autobiography — is NOT an autobiography; it is a historical and cultural survey of India.

Question 4 of 5
Which Indian sportsperson’s autobiography is titled “A Shot at History” and what sport did they play?
A. P.V. Sindhu — Badminton
B. Abhinav Bindra — Shooting
C. Saina Nehwal — Badminton
D. Leander Paes — Tennis
✅ Explanation

A Shot at History is the autobiography of Abhinav Bindra, India’s first individual Olympic gold medallist (10m Air Rifle, 2008 Beijing Olympics). The book is co-authored with Rohit Brijnath and chronicles his journey to Olympic glory. P.V. Sindhu’s book is not titled “A Shot at History.” Mary Kom’s autobiography is Unbreakable. Sania Mirza’s is The Racket.

Question 5 of 5
Nelson Mandela’s autobiography Long Walk to Freedom was partly written while he was imprisoned at which location?
A. Pollsmoor Prison, Cape Town
B. Victor Verster Prison, Paarl
C. Robben Island, South Africa
D. Pretoria Central Prison
✅ Explanation

Nelson Mandela began writing Long Walk to Freedom secretly while imprisoned on Robben Island. The manuscript was buried in the prison garden to hide it from authorities. It was eventually published in 1994, the year he became South Africa’s first black President. Mandela was later moved to Pollsmoor and Victor Verster prisons, but the secret writing began on Robben Island.

✅ Key Takeaways

Remember These for Your Exam
1
Gandhi’s autobiography originally in Gujarati; English title: The Story of My Experiments with Truth; covers life up to 1921. Most tested Indian autobiography.
2
Nehru’s autobiography = An Autobiography (also titled Toward Freedom, 1936); written in Almora Jail 1934–35. The Discovery of India is NOT his autobiography — it’s a cultural survey.
3
Kalam’s Wings of Fire (1999) — co-authored with Arun Tiwari; his ONLY true autobiography. Ignited Minds, India 2020 are NOT autobiographies.
4
Mandela — Long Walk to Freedom: written secretly on Robben Island; manuscript buried in prison garden; published 1994. Anne Frank’s Diary: written 1942–44; published posthumously 1947.
5
Key Sports autobiographies: Bindra = A Shot at History (first individual Olympic gold) | Mary Kom = Unbreakable | Tendulkar = Playing It My Way (with Boria Majumdar) | Kapil Dev = Straight from the Heart.
6
Biography ≠ Autobiography: Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson = biography (NOT by Jobs). Obama wrote two memoirs: Dreams from My Father (1995) and A Promised Land (2020) — these are DIFFERENT books.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs — Famous Autobiographies
Which Indian autobiographies are most important for competitive exams?

The most frequently tested entries in the famous autobiographies list for Indian competitive exams are: Mahatma Gandhi’s The Story of My Experiments with Truth (Gujarati original; covers life up to 1921), Jawaharlal Nehru’s An Autobiography (written in Almora Jail 1934–35), A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s Wings of Fire (co-authored with Arun Tiwari, 1999), Sachin Tendulkar’s Playing It My Way (co-authored with Boria Majumdar, 2014), Mary Kom’s Unbreakable (2013), and Abhinav Bindra’s A Shot at History (2011). Questions typically ask the author’s name given the title, the original language, or a distinguishing fact.

What is the difference between an autobiography and a biography?

An autobiography is written by the person about their own life — for example, Wings of Fire (Kalam wrote it with co-author Arun Tiwari). A biography is written by someone else about another person’s life — for example, Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson is a biography (Isaacson wrote about Jobs). This distinction is tested in English and GK sections. Several famous “autobiographies” on exam lists are actually authorised biographies. Co-authored autobiographies (Tendulkar’s Playing It My Way with Boria Majumdar; Bindra’s A Shot at History with Rohit Brijnath) are still classified as autobiographies.

Which freedom fighters wrote their autobiographies while in prison?

Several Indian freedom fighters wrote landmark works from prison. Jawaharlal Nehru wrote An Autobiography and Glimpses of World History during his imprisonment (Almora Jail, 1934–35). Bal Gangadhar Tilak wrote Gita Rahasya in Mandalay Prison (Burma). B.R. Ambedkar’s Waiting for a Visa was written during a period of social confinement. Nelson Mandela wrote Long Walk to Freedom secretly on Robben Island. These prison-written works appear regularly in UPSC Books & Authors questions.

Are there any recently published autobiographies important for current affairs?

Yes — for 2024–26 exams, important recent autobiographies include: Michelle Obama’s Becoming (2018 — still widely tested; former US First Lady), Barack Obama’s A Promised Land (2020 — his presidential memoir, different from his first memoir Dreams from My Father), Malala Yousafzai’s I Am Malala (2013 — youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner), and Spare by Prince Harry (2023 — global bestseller from the Duke of Sussex). On the Indian side, Sachin Tendulkar’s Playing It My Way (2014) remains a staple, and any autobiography published by current Indian political figures after 2020 may appear in current affairs rounds.

Relevant For
UPSC Prelims — Books & Authors UPSC Prelims — Current Affairs SSC CGL Banking GA Railways RRB State PSC English — Books & Authors NDA / CDS
Prashant Chadha

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