Fiction Is Good for Us, Even Science Says So
May 15, 2012 from KSL.com

SALT LAKE CITY — As a boy of 10, I discovered The Hobbit in my grandfather's basement in a dusty closet behind a band saw.

I remember finding the old, tattered, cover-less copy of the classic J.R.R. Tolkien novel and reading it like a long-lost treasure map.

With the discovery of The Hobbit, I opened Tolkien for the first time. Reading hooked me, and in the years that followed, I lost more hours of sleep to reading than I did to playing video games.

From there it was only a short jump to other fantasy greats like Terry Brooks, Robert Jordan, and T.H. White. Since science fiction is really just fantasy with technology, it wasn't long before I was reading Joe Haldeman, Robert Heinlein, Ray Bradbury, and Richard Matheson. And somewhere along the way, I ran into Tom Clancy, too, as well as Robert Ludlum.

And yet, I can't tell you how often I've been razzed for reading fiction. It isn't uncommon for me to find my associates embarrassed to admit that they read fiction (if they read fiction at all). I've even seen pundits mock and deride the readers of fiction for being lazy. Why read something that isn't real, they argue. Serious people read serious books, and that means nonfiction.

So why read fiction? Here are a few reasons.

1. Self-mastery and empathy. It's been argued that what we read mirrors what we are. To a certain extent, we read what we think we will enjoy. However, when we read we are, for a moment, in the hands of the writer, and no matter the genre, we are not choosing our own path. Their words are our guide, and we find ourselves in new places and situations and experiencing thoughts and emotions that would not otherwise be ours.

As D.G. Meyers has argued, "to read an author is to read someone different from ourselves. Reading is not a means of self-affirmation, but of self- denial. Any book that is any good challenges its readers: This is so, isn’t it? Did you know this? Have you considered that?"

Ann Patchett says it even better: "Reading fiction is important. It is a vital means of imagining a life other than our own, which in turn makes us more empathetic beings. Following complex story lines stretches our brains beyond the 140 characters of sound-bite thinking, and staying within the world of a novel gives us the ability to be quiet and alone, two skills that are disappearing faster than the polar icecaps."

When we read, we step out of the noise of our mundane lives, and we enter the quiet of the mind. They say that you shouldn't judge someone until you've walked a mile in their shoes. Reading fiction might be a way to start that walk.

2. Hone your social skills. An article in Scientific American last year said that reading fiction might actually help you be more socially adept. In fact, it might even gradually alter your personality to "make you open to new experiences and more socially aware."

"Just as computer simulations have helped us understand perception, learning and thinking, stories are simulations of a kind that can help readers understand not just the characters in books but human character in general."

Jet pilots train in simulators, pollsters conduct focus groups to discover how people will respond to products and issues, and we all test-drive a car before we buy it (not to mention dating our spouse before we marry). Why wouldn't we want to expand our range of experience as much as possible, including through the medium of imagination and the pages of a book?

3. To be "well-read." This one is, admittedly, perhaps less intrinsically oriented but still an important byproduct of reading fiction, especially when reading choices are wide and varied. One cannot fully appreciate and understand our culture without understanding our literary roots. How could you know what it means to have "Big Brother watching you" if you haven't read 1984?

What is a Catch-22 without Catch-22 by Joseph Heller? You might know "a Scrooge" because A Christmas Carol has been adapted for the screen so many times, but Charles Dickens wrote it first, and it is best in its literary form even today. And did you know that long before Yahoo was a search engine, it was a dull-witted human ruled by horses from Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift?

Do you like movies? Can you imagine Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean or Jack Sparrow without Robert Louis Stevenson's Long John Silver from Treasure Island? Could Will Smith have been in I Am Legend without Richard Matheson? Or Tom Cruise in Minority Report without Philip K. Dick? The list goes on. Before they were blockbusters, they were novels, and I can promise you this: the book is almost always better than the movie. Don't take my word for it … go pick up the book.

4. It's better for you than television. Unlike watching television, reading actually takes effort. Rather than passively staring at the screen, your brain stays active and alert. Studies have found that watching television can engage Alpha waves, a more relaxed state for the brain, but one that is more passive and open to suggestion.

Chris M. Carmichael, a commentator for Yahoo!, said, "While Alpha waves achieved through meditation are beneficial (they promote relaxation and insight), too much time spent in the low Alpha wave state caused by TV can cause unfocused daydreaming and inability to concentrate. Researchers have said that watching television is similar to staring at a blank wall for several hours.

"Blank wall, eh? I'm not suggesting that you should stop watching television — I enjoy a good show myself — but that reading is better for your brain. It allows you to absorb more information, use more imagination, and more thoroughly create a response all your own."

There's science to support it, too. A recent study posted at Science Now suggests that metaphors — without which good fiction might be almost impossible — make the brain "touchy feely."

Researchers have found that textural metaphors — phrases such as "soft-hearted" — turn on a part of the brain that's important to the sense of touch. The result may help resolve a longstanding controversy over how the brain understands metaphors and may offer scientists a new way to study how different brain regions communicate.

Again, we empathize through our imagination, spurred on by reading. We read, we connect, and when we connect we understand others.

Why read fiction, then? It helps us disconnect from the stresses of our lives and connect with other human beings in an active, empathetic mental process. We learn to connect and experience what we would not otherwise sense.

The other reason I read, and it's just as important, is that reading is a lot of fun.

Last month was the anniversary of the death of one of the English language's finest masters, William Shakespeare. In honor of "the Bard," take a few minutes to find a good novel, sit down in your favorite recliner, and dive in. Whether it is one of Shakespeare's own plays, a modern thriller by James Patterson, or a classic by Charles Dickens, fiction has the power to transport us, carry us away, and open our minds to experiences and view points beyond our own.

For me, it's been two and a half decades since I found that tattered copy of The Hobbit in Grandpa's basement, and I'm a better and happier man for it. Each novel is a new world, and with each new world, I add a little bit to my own.

D.G Meyers says, "If reading is the key to self-mastery, fiction is the master key. … But fiction demands that you either identify with the characters’ decisions or distance yourself from them, and this has a powerful effect. In doing so you shape your own moral experience. Although it may seem to be far removed from the center of the culture right now, fiction remains the best form of reading — the single best way to achieve all of reading’s goods."

It is the best form of reading. Take the plunge, and pick up a novel tonight.

Daniel Burton lives in Holladay, Utah, where he practices law by day and everything else by night. You can follow him on his blog PubliusOnline.com, where he muses on politics, the law, books and ideas and restaurants. EMAIL: