Never are we more concerned with getting it right than whenwriting to one who has suffered a loss. In My DeepestSympathies-- , letter-writing guru Florence Isaacs guides usthrough the ins and outs of offering comfort and support with shortyet meaningful notes that will long be remembered by theirrecipients. She offers guidelines for diverse situations, withsample letters to draw on, so that it's easy to strike theappropriate tone every time. Isaacs explainsthat the individual circumstances help determine what's appropriateto say in a sympathy note, and she provides specific techniques fora wide range of relationships, from the death of a coworker'sspouse to the loss of a friend's elderly parent from Alzheimer's.She also addresses complex situations like the death of an ex-wife,an estranged sibling, or a longtime companion. She even includesthoughtful words for the death of a pet. Whether it's for a blank note or a few extra lines on a card,Isaacs's advice runs the gamut from personal
No one can resist alove letter Love letters are largely a lost and forgotten art. Notlong ago suitors used the written word to work magic, and peoplewere swept off their feet by a sweet, sincere note.How to Write aLove Letterteaches us, once again, how to reinvent this mostmeaningful of arts. In today's rushed, individualistic society,love letters are more potent than ever before. They embody andconvey the mysterious, the unexpected, and the most utterlythoughtful. A love letter can be anything--from a brisk, casualE-mail asking a love interest to coffee to a handwritten marriageproposal that will serve as a family treasure always. Fun,flirtatious, intimate, provocative--a love letter can be any andall of these things. Even the simplest letter can cause a stir.Barrie Dolnick and Donald Baack have collected a wide range ofletters--from old family keepsakes to casual and proper officeE-mails. The authors demonstrate and explain, to both women andmen, that writing a love letter is about turning sincere af