Oh Right, That’s Why
A brief reminder of what books do to us, and why we keep letting them
Reading is one of the oldest things we do for pleasure, and also one of the most quietly radical. You take a physical object — or, increasingly, a glowing rectangle — stare at marks on a surface, and are transported. Not metaphorically transported. Actually somewhere else, in a way that neuroscience has been earnestly trying to quantify for decades while readers have been simply getting on with it. Brain scans of people reading fiction show activity in the sensory and motor cortex — the parts that process real experience. Your brain, apparently, does not entirely distinguish between reading about running through a forest and actually running through a forest. It is, in the best possible sense, being fooled.
The privacy of it
One of reading’s less celebrated virtues is that it is entirely, irreducibly your own. A film is directed. A podcast has a host. Even a conversation has another person in it, with their own agenda and their need to be listened to in return. A book has none of that. It is just you and the text, and what happens between you happens nowhere else. Two people can read the same novel and come away having read, in some meaningful sense, different books — coloured by different memories, different losses, different ideas about what people are like. There is no correct reading. There is only yours.
This privacy extends to something more personal still. Reading is one of the few activities in which it is entirely acceptable — expected, even — to stop and think. To reread a sentence because it was too good to pass through only once. To put the book down and stare at the ceiling for a while. No one is waiting. No notification is pending. The book will be there when you come back, unchanged, patient, without the faint reproach of an unread message.
Other people’s heads
There is a reasonable case that reading fiction is the most effective empathy training available, and that this is not a minor thing. A novel lets you inhabit, for hours at a stretch, a consciousness that is not yours. Not observe it from outside — inhabit it. You think its thoughts. You feel its embarrassments. You want what it wants, even if what it wants is something you would find baffling or objectionable in ordinary life. This is a strange gift. We spend most of our lives firmly inside our own heads, with only intermittent and partial access to anyone else’s. Literature is one of the few available exceptions.
“A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one.”
George R.R. Martin, who has presumably read quite a few himself.
Research broadly supports what readers have always suspected: that people who read fiction regularly tend to score higher on measures of empathy and social understanding. Whether the reading causes this or whether empathetic people are simply more drawn to fiction is the kind of question academics enjoy, but the correlation is there regardless. Something is happening in the exchange between reader and book that has consequences beyond the book itself.
The slow things
Reading is also, at this particular moment in history, a quietly countercultural act. Not dramatically countercultural — you are not going to get arrested for it, and no one will be particularly impressed at a dinner party — but countercultural in the sense that it runs against the grain of almost everything else competing for your attention. It is slow. It is linear. It requires sustained focus on a single thing. It does not update. It does not send you a notification when something happens. It just sits there, asking you to continue.
This is harder than it used to be, and most readers will admit it. The attention that a novel requires — deep, unhurried, willing to follow a thought for several pages — is exactly the kind of attention that constant connectivity tends to erode. Many people report finding it difficult to read for long stretches in the way they once could, and find, when they manage it, that it feels like a recovery of something. Not quite a luxury. More like remembering what a full breath feels like.
What stays
Books accumulate in ways that other media do not, or not quite in the same way. A film you loved in 1995 is harder to carry with you than a novel you loved in 1995. The novel left something inside you — a voice, a set of images, a character who felt more real than some actual people. You may have forgotten the plot entirely and retain only a mood, a sentence, a scene involving rain and a specific kind of sadness. This is not a failure of memory. It is how books work. They do not ask to be remembered intact. They ask to be absorbed.
There is also the physical object to consider, for those who still use one. A shelf of read books is a peculiar kind of autobiography — not the life you lived, but the lives you borrowed. The spines alone can send you somewhere. That particular green paperback. The one with the broken spine because you read it too fast and held it too tight. The one someone gave you with a note inside that you have never thrown away.
The simple answer
For all the neuroscience and the empathy research and the cultural criticism, the reason most people read comes down to something more straightforward: it is one of the few things that reliably makes them feel less alone. Not in a desperate sense. In the sense of recognition — the sentence that says something you had felt but not said, about grief or embarrassment or the specific way afternoon light falls in October, and you think: someone else noticed that. Someone sat down, decades or centuries ago, and noticed the same thing you noticed, and had the patience and the skill to write it down, and here you are, finding it.
That is a small miracle. It happens in books constantly, and almost nowhere else with quite the same reliability.
So no, we haven’t forgotten why we love it. We just occasionally need the reminder — which is, come to think of it, also what books are for.
One more thing
All of which brings us, gently but firmly, to your local bookshop. Not the algorithm. Not the overnight delivery. The actual shop, on the actual street, with the slightly idiosyncratic section labelling and the person behind the counter who has read more than you and is willing to prove it. The one that smells right. The one where you go in for one book and come out with three, which was always the plan whether you admitted it or not.
Independent bookshops do something that no online retailer has managed to replicate: they make recommendations that are for you specifically, based on a conversation, a hunch, a knowing look at what you just put on the counter. They host the readings and the book clubs and the evenings that go on longer than intended. They are, in a quiet way, community infrastructure — the kind that only becomes visible when it’s gone, by which point it is too late to do anything about it.
So buy the book locally. It costs roughly the same, it feels considerably better, and the bookshop — your bookshop — will still be there next time you need it. Which, if the above is any indication, will be sooner than you think.