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Finding happiness in a self-help book: ‘People come into the shop and they’re really fed up about things.’ Photograph: kumeda/Getty Images
Finding happiness in a self-help book: ‘People come into the shop and they’re really fed up about things.’ Photograph: kumeda/Getty Images

Stressed Brits buy record number of self-help books

This article is more than 5 years old

Bookshop owners say political turmoil has sent customers in search of uplifting titles

Sales of self-help books have reached record levels in the past year, as stressed-out Britons turn to celebrities, psychologists and internet gurus for advice on how to cope with uncertain times.

Three million such books were sold – a rise of 20% – according to figures from Nielsen Book Research, propelling self-improvement or pop psychology into one of the fastest-growing genres of publishing.

“People come into the shop and they’re really fed up about things. They’re looking for reassurances and peace of mind, so self-help books have become incredibly popular,” said Paul Sweetman, owner of City Books in the seaside town of Hove.

In 25 years of business, Sweetman says he’s never known customers more in need of uplifting reading than they are now – a result, he believes, of the political climate both here and abroad.

Self-help books used to be something to smirk about, said Sweetman; now they’re a badge of honour and “as good to read as any novel”.

Marie Moser, owner of the Edinburgh Bookshop, agrees. “The new batch of writers are not getting all la-de-da about stuff like mindfulness and mental health – they’re saying this is why it works, this is how you can do it and this is my experience,” she said.

Moser believes the renaissance has been driven by word-of-mouth recommendations for books such as Chimp Paradox by Steve Peters – a sort of mind-management manual to help people become more confident.

Some of the biggest-selling self-help authors have built up armies of followers by being loud-mouthed and caustic. They’re easy to spot from the expletives in the titles, like Mark Manson’s The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck. And some of them are by celebrities, including Russell Brand, Ruby Wax and Fearne Cotton, whose hot takes on how to be happy have boosted the category to £30m a year – a welcome fillip for hard-pressed independent booksellers.While the genre has tended to be more popular with women, Keira O’Brien, data editor at the The Bookseller magazine, said authors like Manson had successfully wooed a younger, angst-ridden male audience.

“It’s almost like male readers are looking for guidance or reassurance on how to be a man in a post #MeToo world,” O’Brien said. “It’s a noticeable skew which has never really happened before”.

Self-help themes are crossing into other areas of literature, too. Memoirs about mental health by Matt Haig and Rose McGowan, while not technically of the genre, have been hugely influential.

City Books’ Sweetman adds that nostalgia as a form of self-help is also big business. The new trend, he says, is for older people – in their 60s and 70s – to buy books they used to read when they were kids.

“They want something that’s safe and familiar, something where they know nothing nasty is going to happen”.

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