I love to write so no one has ever had to prod me to write a thank you note or drop a note to someone I have been thinking about. A friend gave me this book last week, and it has been kind of fun to see my writing needs affirmed: a special pen, artistic note cards, a cup of tea, a quiet mind.
Building the case for letter writing vs. emails, texts or phone calls as a means of pleasure for the writer and the recipient rang true for me. How I savor the note received in the mail. For those who have never had any guidance around the etiquette of note or letter writing, the book will be very helpful. Thank You notes, I'm Sorry notes, I Love/Like You Notes - each of these topics is broken down further so whatever the reader is looking for, the perfect phrase to jump start the writer on any occasion is there. Along the way Shepherd offers advice: don't ever mail a letter you've written in anger; what to say/not to say when breaking off a relationship, how to respond to the break up note.
She acknowledges that some people identify poor handwriting as an excuse. She offers a number of simple writing exercises to practice, repetitive loops and such, which reminded me how much I loved handwriting exercises as an eight year old. There was a meditative aspect to it...maybe I'll go back to it.
Here and there, the author becomes the "Note Writing Police" around certain topics, creating quite a few rules that might be off-putting to some. Don't extend beyond the reason for the note, she warns, such as writing about your recent vacation in a thank you note. In these cases, she recommends, write a second note the next day! Who knew?
One last thought: the subtitle of this book is "A Guide to Reclaiming Civilized Communication," missing from so much of our public and private discourse these days. So just grab that pen you love (never a pencil,) and start to write to someone. It's almost a civic duty, a moral imperative when you consider the subtitle, and keep in mind what Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, "Life is not so short that there is always time for courtesy."