I don't know what caught my attention as I passed the rack of new non-fiction books in the Renton Library, it probably was the words on the spine: "An Imagined World" by June Goodfield. At that point the word 'imagination' was probably an attention getter. I picked the book out and read the inside jacket blurb, describing briefly what the book was about. It was about a scientific discovery. As I read the jacket I came to a part that had a strange effect on me, which I recognized very faintly was seeing words in print that had been in my thought. What I read was this:
"...she caught a sudden glimmer of possibility; she observed a pattern that had hitherto been unnoticed or ignored and she began to think of explanations for what she'd seen. ....She persisted, thanks not only to tenacity but to an inexperience--a mind uncluttered by pre-conceptions." There was an additional content in my thought that was not on the jacket of the book "she discovered something that was invisible because it was ever present. (right in front of everyone's eyes.) The sense that 'something that's ever present becomes invisible' remained in my mind alongside the memory of this event.