DESCRIPTION
In her autobiography, The Story of My Life (1952), Enid Blyton says that, from an early age, she “liked making up stories better than I liked doing anything else.” As a child she would go to bed at night and stories would flood into her mind “all mixed-up, rather like dreams are, but yet each story had its own definite thread—its beginning and middle and ending.” Enid Blyton did not realise at the time that that was unusual, remarking in a letter to psychologist Peter McKellar on 15th February 1953: “I thought all children had the same ‘night stories’ and was amazed when one day I found they hadn’t.” She described her “night stories” as “all kinds of imaginings in story form,” saying: “Because of this imagining I wanted to write—to put down what I had seen and felt and heard in my imagination.”