The recent announcement that
GPs
(全科医生) may send patients with depression away with the suggestion that they
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a "mood-enhancing" book will have entranced some
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left others bristling. When we set up our bibliotherapy service through The School of Life in 2008, our
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was obvious: to show people that books, and
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novels, not only have the
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to lift spirits, but to
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fundamental psychological shifts, healing and enriching the heart, the intellect and the soul in extraordinary ways. But you could
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that someone with depression would
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to make their way to the library,
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put a spring in their stride, simply by the offer of some mood enhancing reads.
One of the things we have found as bibliotherapists is that clients with depression
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a therapeutic book require a very
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prescription. Some may want a book that offers some escape—
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case the odd English humour of Dodie Smith"s
I Capture the Castle
may
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the trick. But others may
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with impatience to anything
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seems too unlike real life.
The majority of our clients do not come to us for medical reasons; most come
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they love reading, and in this day of publishing overload they want to be sure they use their reading time well. There are few greater pleasures in life than discovering a novel that
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back a world you recognise—and yet takes you into a deeper experience of that world. And research has shown that reading can be highly effective in
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stress. We find Henry James a
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way to order your mind when everything becomes too much—the literary
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of Beethoven or Bach.