Part I. My toughest 'self-splits' and what produced them -- A devout Mormon is challenged by rival selves -- A pious moralist confronts a cheater -- The cheerful poser comforts a griever, or, A would-be tough buy meets grief and conceals the tears -- My many selves confront the man who believes in love -- Ambition vs. teaching fro the love of it -- The hypocritical Mormon missionary becomes a skilled masker, and discovers 'hypocrisy-upward' -- The puritan preaches at the luster while the hypocrite covers the show -- The lover becomes a trapped army private -- An egalitarian quarrels scornfully with a hypocritical bourgeois -- A college dean struggles to escape -- Part 2. The splits multiply- in somewhat less torturous form -- The quarrel between the cheater and the moralist produces gullible-Booth -- A wandering generalist longs to be a true scholar -- A would-be novelist mourns behind the would-be lover and would-be scholar -- The committed father and husband, as lover, shouts 'For same!' at all the other selves -- The man of peace tries to tame the slugger -- Interlude: A potpourri of chapters I refuse to write (let alone include) -- Part 3. Aging, religion, and-surprise!-the quest for a plausible harmony -- The old fart debates with a bunch of young Booths, while posing as younger than 84 -- Harmony at last? In his autobiography, My Many Selves, Wayne C. Booth is less concerned with his professional achievements--though the book by no means ignores his distinguished career--than with the personal vision that emerges from a long life lived thoughtfully. For Booth, even the autobiographical process becomes part of a quest to harmonize the diverse, often conflicting aspects of who he was. To see himself clearly and whole, he broke the self down, personified the fragments, uncovered their roots in his experience and background, and engaged those selves and experiences in dialogue. Basic to his story and to its lifelong concern with ethics and rhetoric was his Mormon youth in rural Utah. In adulthood he struggled with that background, abandoning most Mormon doctrines, but he retained the identity, ethical questions, and concern with communication that this upbringing gave him. The uncommon wisdom and careful attention that empower Wayne Booth's many other books cause My Many Selves to transcend its genre, as the best memoirs always do. The book becomes a window through which we who read it will see our own conflicts, our own ongoing struggle to live honestly and ethically in the world. Wayne Booth died in October 2005, soon after completing work on this autobiography
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