Why privacy is a top commandment at Modern Heirloom Books
Dawn Roode is the founder of and principal personal historian at Modern Heirloom Books. Every member of her team is carefully vetted and adheres to the same strict privacy promise for the clients we serve.
In a world that prizes visibility—where nearly everything is photographed, posted, and shared—it can feel almost countercultural to keep things private.
At Modern Heirloom Books, privacy isn’t just a courtesy. It’s a cornerstone of our philosophy.
Many of the books we create are never seen by anyone outside the family who commissioned them. They aren’t photographed for social media, featured on our website, or referenced by name in our portfolio. And that’s entirely by design.
Stories deserve discretion.
Every project begins with trust. Our clients open their hearts, their homes, their family archives—and often, their vulnerabilities. Behind every heirloom book are stories of love and resilience, yes, but also stories of loss, struggle, and deeply personal transformation.
Those stories are not ours to share.
While we’re proud of every book we create—the craftsmanship, the design, the narrative care—what we value even more is the confidence our clients place in us. The knowledge that what they entrust to Modern Heirloom Books will be handled with reverence and never exploited for publicity.
We navigate sensitive waters with care.
Over the years, we’ve worked with families in every imaginable circumstance:
Busy executives who don’t have time to manage a sprawling archive but want to preserve their story for their children.
Thought leaders whose public voices differ from the personal reflections they want to preserve privately.
Families navigating tension or rifts between siblings, where the story must be told with sensitivity, neutrality, and grace.
Loved ones working through grief or reconciliation, uncertain what they’re ready to share.
Each project requires not just editorial skill, but emotional intelligence. We listen without judgment. We guide with care. We adapt to the boundaries that feel right for each family.
That discretion is not incidental; it’s essential.
Privacy is a form of respect.
The act of recording a life story is, at its heart, intimate. It asks people to speak aloud things they may never have said before.
We treat those stories as sacred. They belong to the families who tell them—not to us, not to the world, not to the internet.
So while it might mean fewer glossy “after” photos on our Instagram feed, it also means something far more important: that our clients feel protected, honored, and free to share their truths fully.
When you entrust us with your story, you’re not just commissioning a book—you’re choosing confidentiality, compassion, and care.
In an age that celebrates exposure, we choose discretion.
Finishing a family history book can feel like saying goodbye. Learn why it’s so hard to end—and how completing the story can become its own act of love.
Dawn Roode offers up four suggestions for further reading (and listening) for anyone who, like her, is missing a friend or family member during the holidays.
A book that captures your legacy should be designed with longevity in mind, so it remains engaging and accessible for generations. It should be beautiful, too.
We are a world of talkers, but what we need is to listen, and to be listened to. Find inspiration from author Kate Murphy and personal historian Dawn Roode.
As AI gets better and more accessible, will there still be a need for in-person story sharing services offered by personal biographers and historians? Yes!
Modern Heirloom Books is a business, of course, but it’s a business defined by one person’s mission, expertise, and passion—and I’m pleased to meet you!
What better way to scope out if a personal historian is a good fit for you than to hear about others’ experiences, in their own words? I am humbled and proud.
Podcast host Melissa Ceria and personal historian Dawn Roode discuss the importance of family history preservation and finding solace in stories after loss.
It’s important to me to stress some sense of urgency about writing about your life—but I don’t think you’ll have regrets if you don’t write about it ALL.
Discovering a stack of handwritten letters can feel like winning the family history lottery—but is it always the right thing to read (or share) them?
You may think you are writing about your life for your family—to honor your ancestors, to give a gift to your descendants. But the truth is deeper. You’ll see.
We all get a happy feeling when a “memory” pops up on a social feed on our phone. Just remember that you have access to ALL your memories ANY time you want!
Have you ever thought about what will happen to your diaries—who will read them, how you may one day use them? Join me as I consider this profound question.
I might not have time for the full-fledged memoir I want to write, but I can make time every day for this easy and significant journal exercise—and so can you.
How lucky I am to "meet" your loved ones through the tributes you and others share in their honor! The stories that memorialize them live on for generations.
Sometimes a life writing project can become overwhelming—so much so that we stop writing at all. Get back on track with your memoir with this three-step reset.
Recording loved ones' stories is important to most Americans, and yet not even half of us have done so. Here, resources to make memory-keeping easier.
Our memories are anything but fixed—and when stories are passed down to a new generation, their malleability, their meaning, and their impact change, too.
Ever wonder what it might be like to work together on your OWN heirloom book project? Listen to past clients' feedback—and words of thanks!—to get inspired.
This ongoing pandemic has challenged some long-held beliefs—including that personal history interviews must be done in person (nay!). Wisdom from adversity...
I can feel overwhelmed by all the ways I “should” be spending my newfound time at home. It’s okay, though, to get lost in a good book or stare out a window.
As I turn 50, I have one wish: For those who knew my mother to share with me stories of her life, and for those who didn't, to share a remembrance with loved ones.
As the tenth anniversary of losing my mom approaches, I have been caught up in thoughts of the past—but where are those vivid memories that once flooded me?
A wistful look at how my affinity for epiphanies led me to become the founder of Modern Heirloom Books—and how “moments of being” transform our heirloom books.
Modern Heirloom Books founder Dawn Roode on her journey from national magazines to bespoke life story books, plus the new signature product lines of books.
At Modern Heirloom Books, privacy is sacred. Learn why we never share clients’ stories publicly—and how discretion builds trust and honors every legacy.