<p>&#8216;A masterpiece of popularization&#8217; Times Literary Supplement</p> <p>&#8216;A fascinating account based on objective scientific research of the ways in which mental states affect the individual&#8217;s liability to disease&#8230; Martin is a highly civilised scientist who seasons his text with witty parentheses. He also provides many examples from literature ranging widely from Shakespeare Goethe and Hardy to Tolstoy Dostoevsky and Kafka&#8230; Interesting informative and a pleasure to read.&#8217; ANTHONY STORR Sunday Times</p> <p>&#8216;Excellent&#8217; JON TURNEY Financial Times</p> <p>&#8216;This most accessible account of a difficult subject blows away some prejudices and pleasingly justifies others&#8230; Martin is a biologist whose style is considerate of the layman&#8230;and it is a tribute to his own benignly infectious enthusiasm for his subject that his closing thoughts are encouraging&#8230; Remarkable.&#8217; ALAN JUDD Daily Telegraph</p> <p>&#8216;Compelling&#8230; Balanced and impressively up to date&#8230; The tone of voice the open-minded but critical intelligence should uplift the quality of the debate&#8230; Martin&#8217;s lucid account of possible mechanisms of the connections between mental states and personality traits and illnesses is a notable triumph of his book&#8230; Excellent.&#8217; RAYMOND TALLIS Times Literary Supplement</p>