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Pushing the envelope on love letters (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-08 14:19
LONDON - Love may be in the air but it is no longer in the mail,
according to a new competition to revive the lost art of love letter writing.
Run for the first time last year in the United States when it attracted 5,000
entries, philanthropist Henri Zimand's competition to find the best written love
letters has now opened to entrants from Britain as well.
"In this age of one-line e-mails and abbreviated text messages, the simple
art of letter writing has all but been forgotten," he said. "Writing a love
letter is a dying art and to me that is a real shame."
The competition is dedicated to the memory of Zimand's wife Anda who died
from breast cancer in 2003 aged 49.
"No one should underestimate the power of a letter that truly comes from the
heart and with every letter I receive, I am moved, and remember my Anda," Zimand
said.
For each of the first 10,000 letters submitted to the website
www.AndaSpirit.com in Britain or www.AndaSpiritUSA.com in the United States,
Zimand will make a contribution to a cancer facility in the area where the
letter originated.
If inspiration is needed, an example of one of last year's entries is as
follows: "Heartfelt and true, your beauty shines through, with love, emotion and
everlasting devotion, I yearn to marry you."
The winners -- to be selected by a panel including Zimand and judges from the
Romance Writers of America -- will be flown to New York and, on the morning of
St Valentine's Day, taken on a romantic horse-drawn carriage ride in the
city.
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