

The death of his father, for example, is mentioned only in passing, and large portions of his life are simply glossed over.

In fact, Augustine frequently leaves out events that readers may consider important. The Confessions is not a straightforward account of the events of Augustine's life. However, Augustine's autobiography is unique in several ways. Numerous Classical authors had produced stories of their own lives, and Augustine also had specifically Christian examples to draw on, such as the passion narratives of martyred saints like Perpetua. (The most famous example of a reaction against Augustine's Confessions appears in the Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the French Romantic writer and philosopher.) However, Augustine's Confessions was certainly not the first work of autobiography in Western literature. Augustine did not simply establish a pattern he produced a work whose influence was so pervasive that all later autobiographers were affected by it, either positively or negatively. It is sometimes said that Augustine invented the modern autobiography.

At its most basic, an autobiography is the story of a person's life, written by that person.
