me-moir
n. A memoir that is exceptionally immodest and self-centered.
Etymology
Examples
2009
I've said this before I think of Brother, I'm Dying as not a me-moir, but a nou-moir, a we-moir; it's not just my story but all these stories intertwined.
—Martha St Jean, “Genius: a Talk With Edwidge Danticat,” The Huffington Post, December 23, 2009
1999
She became the poster girl for all the evils of the book genre my friend Jane calls "me-moirs" (as in, Dad was a drunk; Mom was a drunk; Dad was my lover; Dad was my mom). Maynard's peers jumped all over her for being everything writers suspect we are and want desperately not to be—self-centered, exploitative, mercenary.
—Jacquelyn Mitchard, “In defense of Joyce Maynard,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 13, 1999
1994 (earliest)
Among the suggestions from Dymocks bookshops for Dad today is Bob Hawke's modesty-free me-moirs, described as the little bloke's own account of his life and career "as Australia's longest-serving prime minister". A claim at the buttock-end of credibility, we would have thought.
—Lawrence Money, “Spy,” Sunday Age, September 04, 1994