Getting lost in a good book can help keep you healthy

Benefits of the brain: Books can improve your brain capacity

Reading is good for you. I would say that, of course. I’m a novelist – I’ve written five books for teenagers – and it’s obviously in my interest to encourage people to read.

But there’s increasing evidence that reading for pleasure isn’t just another leisure pursuit, or merely a way of improving literacy skills and factual knowledge.

It might actually be good for our mental and physical health too.

In an age of Twitter and short attention spans, reading novels – which requires intense concentration over a long period of time – could be the antidote.

Neuroscientist Baroness Susan Greenfield says that reading helps to lengthen attention spans in children and improves their ability to think clearly.

‘Stories have a beginning, a middle and an end – a structure that encourages our brains to think in sequence, to link cause, effect and significance,’ she says.



‘It is essential to learn this skill as a small child, while the brain has more plasticity, which is why it’s so important for parents to read to their children.

‘The more we do it, the better we get at it.’

Reading can enrich our relationships by increasing our understanding of other cultures and helping us learn to empathise.

A recent study at the University of Michigan found that there had been a 48 per cent decrease in empathy among college students, with the sharpest decline in the past ten – most technology dependent – years, suggesting, although not proving, a correlation. Encouraging reading could counteract this.

Brain exercise: Imagining an event in a book is as good at activating the brain as actually 'doing' it.

‘In a computer game, you might have to rescue a princess, but you don’t care about her, you just want to win,’ explains Baroness Greenfield.

‘But a princess in a book has a past, present and future, she has connections and motivations. We can relate to her. We see the world through her eyes.’

According to John Stein, emeritus professor of neuroscience at Magdalen College, Oxford, reading is far from a passive activity. ‘Reading exercises the whole brain,’ he explains.



Development: Reading stories to your child will help their brains develop the ability to analyse cause, effect and significance of events

‘When we “get lost” in a good book, we’re doing more than simply following a story. Imagining what’s happening is as good at activating the brain as “doing” it.’

New MRI scanning techniques now enable science to prove this. In 2009, an American brain-imaging study showed that when we read and imagine the landscapes, sounds, smells and tastes described on the page, the various areas of the brain that are used to process these experiences in real life are activated, creating new neural pathways.



In other words, our brains simulate real experiences, just as if we were living them ourselves. This doesn’t happen when we’re watching TV or playing a computer game.

Getting stuck into a good novel appears to be beneficial to our mental health. As the old saying goes: ‘You’re never alone with a book.’ Reading not only staves off feelings of loneliness, it helps us to wind down, destress and forget our own problems for a while.



In 2009, researchers at the University of Sussex found that just six minutes of reading can reduce stress levels by more than two-thirds, more than listening to music or going out for a walk.

It is thought that the concentration required to read distracts the mind, easing muscle tension and slowing the heart rate.

Inner calm: Reading can also benefit your mental health as it starves off loneliness and helps de-stress and takes the focus of our personal problems

Reading may be good for physical health too, preventing brain ageing and disease.

A study, just published in the Archives of Neurology, from the University of California, Berkeley, found that engaging in brain-stimulating pursuits including reading on a daily basis – from a young age – could help prevent Alzheimer’s by inhibiting the formation of the amyloid (protein) plaques which are found in the brains of those with the disease.

Scientists scanned the brains of healthy adults aged 60 and over (average age was 76) with no signs of dementia and found those who had been doing daily brain-stimulating activities, such as reading, playing chess, and writing letters since they were six years old showed very low levels of amyloid plaques.

But those who did not enjoy these activities had lots of plaques.