As previously mentioned, Stella Gibbons makes some insightful comments about writers, writing and the imagination in her novel My American, in which Amy Lee is the main character. Amy's love of reading, writing and research and her need for solitude as a young girl are all very typical of people who grow up to be writers.
This article contains some particularly significant extracts with the commentary they inspire:
Freely flowing words and ideas
What Stella Gibbons says about Amy's writing is a good description of what it feels like when the ideas and words come easily:
“Her stories never stuck, but sometimes she enjoyed writing them more than she did at other times. When the pen flew and her hand ached, when there was nothing real in the world except the white paper before her and the flying tip of the nib, and the picture in her mind that she was describing turned so quickly into words that she could no longer tell at what instant the figures in it became marks on the paper—then the story was Beginning to Run, and unfortunate is the writer who has never tasted such a moment.”
Unfortunate indeed is the writer whose creations are never fluent and painless - or frictionless as Rudyard Kipling would say.
And yes, the whole outer world often does disappear for some people when they are engrossed in reading or writing.
More freely flowing words and ideas
After getting a job as an office girl, Amy is sent to collect some copy from a very famous writer who has produced many stories for the boys’ magazine she works for.