Bibliotherapy, reading as a form of self-help therapy

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By jstankevicz

The Reader by Jean-Jacques Henner
The Reader by Jean-Jacques Henner

The mental health professionals are still figuring out something that every reader knows instinctively - reading books is a form of personal therapy. Just think of the phrases we use to describe reading: "curling up with a book", "reading to get away from it all", "escape story", "relax with a good book"... These sentiments evoke feelings of comfort, security, tranquility, and being in control of yourself and your surroundings.

The Wall Street Journal July 31, 2007 edition featured and article by Kevin Helliker titled, Bibliotherapy: Reading Your Way To Mental Health. Helliker notes that bibliotherapy is getting some recognition as a useful therapy in some cases. He cites recent articles in the Behavior Research and Therapy Journal that seem to demonstrate the effectiveness of reading in some patients with depression and other mood disorders. He notes that most research suggests the bibliotherapy can be helpful in conjunction with conventional therapy. (Helliker article)

Self-help books have always been popular sellers. Unfortunately being a best seller doesn't guarantee that a book is useful, or that reading the book will assure weight loss and make you wealthy. Some self-help books (and web sites for that matter) are no more than printed snake oil elixirs.

Yet, many people have turned their life around, or found new approaches to life, or at a minimum some solace and self confidence from reading some self-help books. Studies show, and many therapists believe that the right self-help books could be gaining some new found respect as a personal form of therapy in some situations.

For years, bibliotherapy has been used with children. There is a large body of information targeting reading for our young. Now it may be true that it is never too late. Bibliotherapy can be applied to all ages. It's certainly a very good excuse to curl up with a good book...

The Reader, a Bronze Sculpture by Melanie C. Thomas
The Reader, a Bronze Sculpture by Melanie C. Thomas

Books to Grow With: A Guide to Using the Best Children¹s Fiction for Everyday Issues and Tough Challenges, by Cheryl Coon

Books to Grow With: A Guide to Using the Best Children's Fiction for Everyday Issues and Tough Challenges
Amazon Price: $17.68
List Price: $17.95

Comments

jstankevicz profile image

jstankevicz Hub Author 2 years ago

Thanks for the update Janet. I fixed the link to Helping Books Connection.

Janet 2 years ago

Thank you for including the Helping Books Connection on your list of links. The address linked in the article is defunct. The current location of Helping Books Connection is:

http://mercury.educ.kent.edu/helpingbooks/

Sincerely,

Janet Ingraham Dwyer

State Library of Ohio

CarolynnMarie profile image

CarolynnMarie 3 years ago

I think this is a greally great page on bibliotherapy -- I am currently writing a bibliotherapeutic novel and I love the medium.

I might also suggest taking a look at the University of Nevada Las Vegas' Bibliotherapy Education Project: http://www.library.unlv.edu/faculty/research/bibli

The books listed there are sorted by age, topic, language, usefulness, and other qualities. Most are intended to be used with children, and they cover a wide variety of concerns. You can even narrow books by gender of protagonist and etc.

SweetiePie profile image

SweetiePie Level 6 Commenter 3 years ago

Reading gives us time alone to process our thoughts, so this of course is a great form of self-therapy.

Howard 4 years ago

Here's a select list of resources about bibliotherapy.

jstankevicz profile image

jstankevicz Hub Author 4 years ago

Kaibraine, thank you for sharing your experience.

Kaibraine profile image

Kaibraine 4 years ago

My daughter is Autistic. Books have been very therapeutic for her. She reads the whole time and is much calmer as a result. Bibliotherapy is definately an excellent form of therapy.

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