Quickie post today as Therese is still out-of-town and I am about to cope with all the fabulous entries for our Insane Analogies contest (that’s what I’m unofficially calling it). BTW, you have until midnight tonight EST to submit your entry.

Contest alert: over at WOW! Women On Writing, Sue Silverman, author of Fearless Confessions: A Writer’s Guide to Memoir, is holding a contest to give away a copy of her latest book. Leave a comment to be entered in the drawing.

Husband Ken, he of the Single Space Gloaters Club, sent me a link to this interesting article on why certain people can visualize the written word more clearly than others:

Any avid reader knows the power of a book to transport you into another world, be it the wizard realm of “Harry Potter” or the legal intrigue of the latest John Grisham.

Part of the reason we get lost in these imaginary worlds might be because our brains effectively simulate the events of the book in the same way they process events in the real world, a new study suggests.

The new study, detailed in the July 21 issue of the journal Psychological Science, builds on previous work that links the way our brains process images and written words to the way they process actions we perform ourselves.

Examining these links could shed light on why some people enjoy reading more than others and how our reading abilities change with time. Essentially, some people might paint a more vivid mental picture of written prose than others.

The study is a tad flawed (28 participants, 20 of them women?) but it brings up something that’s puzzled me for a while — why some people are readers and others are not. I can’t imagine not visualizing when I’m reading, and I was surprised to learn that others don’t.

I also find that my visualization abilities seemed to have strengthened over the years, maybe because I have to draw so heavily on imagination to write. Or maybe I write better because my visualization ability has been honed.

What do you think? Have you found that your visualization abilities have improved with age? Do you think writing has improved your imagination, or has your imagination improved your writing?

ETA: My good bud Michelle sent me a link to a potental promo opportunity: Skype An Author.

The Mission of the Skype an Author Network is to provide K-12 teachers and librarians a way to connect authors, books, and young readers through virtual visits.

For those entering our contest? GOOD LUCK!

Image by ~nashoba-hostina.

Kathleen Bolton is co-founder of Writer Unboxed. She has written two novels under the pseudonym Cassidy Calloway: Confessions of a First Daughter, and Secrets of a First Daughter--both books in a YA series about the misadventures of the U.S. President's teen-aged daughter, published by HarperCollins.
Kathleen Bolton
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