USA TODAY International Edition

‘Selfie’: A self-portrait not at all what you think

- David Holahan

Spoiler alert: Despite its trendy title, Selfie is not a frivolous book about taking photograph­s of oneself and littering social media with them, although this pastime is examined.

The opening chapter addresses a topic at once related and quite different from egotistica­l celebratio­n: suicide, or the obliterati­on of oneself.

In his latest book, Will Storr (The Heretics) strives to fathom personhood: who we are and how we became that person.

Along the way, the British journalist and novelist seeks to better understand himself as well as others, including a mobster who has turned to Jesus.

Among other adventures, he checks himself into a Benedictin­e monastery in Scotland and endures six days of encounter therapy at the Esalen Institute in California, once frequented by selfseeker­s including Jane Fonda, Natalie Wood and Charles Manson.

Selfie: How We Became So Self-Obsessed and What It’s Doing to Us (Overlook Press, 416 pp., ★★★g) is an ambitious survey of the influences that make us who we are.

In addition to his own experience­s and insights, Storr draws on scholarly literature and interviews experts on the human personalit­y.

He ably synthesize­s centuries of attitudes and beliefs about selfhood, primarily in Western thought, from Aristotle, John Calvin and Freud to Sartre, Ayn Rand and Steve Jobs.

His straightfo­rward prose and personal anecdotes make all of it eminently digestible.

A good deal of what is covered is intuitive, such as: We care what others think about us; we want to be like people who are more successful or thinner than we are; and we each create our own narrative, often highly fictionali­zed, about who we are. Trouble can erupt when our heroic self-stories clash with reality.

So who are we, after all? Storr can cut through the swirl of intellectu­al theorizing and cultural pressures in one sentence: “We have a self for work and a self for home, a self for lonely restaurant­s and a self for roadside diners; a self for Twitter and a self for Facebook, a self for the plumber and a self for the mayor.”

The author himself confesses to being a victim of “social perfection­ism” and the unrealisti­c expectatio­ns it can burden people with. He cites studies that link the rise of social media to, among other things, an increase in eating disorders and body dysmorphia. Once “keeping up with the Joneses” meant measuring ourselves against immediate neighbors; today, technology connects us with an inexhausti­ble number of inimitable Joneses.

If Storr can rattle on a bit, his chronicle generally is crisp and compelling. He is at his best when he throws his own experience­s into the mix. Storr clearly wrestles with great expectatio­ns and confesses to bouts of depression and self-loathing: “I seem to be caught in a lifelong rhythm of expecting more from myself than my talent and character can supply.”

The solution, Storr concludes, is to drop out of the perfection­ist rat race: “You’re limited. Imperfect. And there’s nothing you can do about it.”

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Author Will Storr

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