Dear Editor. It has come to my attention that you do not allow titles on “Letters to the Editor.” I have learned this through direct experience, having recently submitted several “Letters to the Editor.” None of the titles were printed. They all originally had titles, and very good ones, I might add. This seems rather odd. Peculiar. Dumbfounding. Every article in the Voice has titles. “Meeks returns as managing editor.” “Chamber, Voice, announce merger. I mean, award nominations.” “Nalley addresses questions, concerns.” Each is followed by a story that relies on, plays on, explains, the title. When there is no title, but only “Letter to the Editor,” it doesn’t sound very interesting. Why would I write a Letter to the Editor? I don’t even know the editor. I’m writing a letter to address the public. Something I see as unusual. Alarming. Perhaps a view opposite of the status-quo. A rebuttal. Maybe a plea: for justice. Fairness. Perhaps just a thought. Maybe a good deed has been done. Recognition. Thankfulness. Magazine articles have titles; people have titles; movies have titles; newspaper articles have titles; books have titles. Most certainly “Letters to the Editor” should have titles. Something that draws attention. Captures the imagination. Informs the people in few words. Something of which the body of the written work can dance around. Tease. Elevate. At the very least, explain. Clearly, “Letter to the Editor” serves none of these purposes. I have not, however, let “no title allowed” deter me from my work, which is to CONSTANTLY STIR THE POT. This may ruffle some feathers. Upset some. Make people uncomfortable. But it’s all in good fun. A curmudgeons job. Cantankerous. So please, let us put titles on our “Letters to the Editor”. Everything has a title. Even the Editor.
LEAVE IT TO PEEVER exists to give the other side of the story. Challenge the status quo. Confront conventional wisdom. This is sadly needed. I believe it is best to always cast positive doubt on the powers that be. It helps to even up the story.Or score. Please feel free to comment and submit articles. Not everything needs to be serious. I use a lot of slapstick humor, satire, and pontificating. Sit back, relax, and enjoy. We're about to embark on a survival adventure.
Sunday, January 14, 2018
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Dear Editor. It has come to my attention that you do not allow titles on “Letters to the Editor.” I have learned this through direct experience, having recently submitted several “Letters to the Editor.” None of the titles were printed. They all originally had titles, and very good ones, I might add. This seems rather odd. Peculiar. Dumbfounding. Every article in the Voice has titles. “Meeks returns as managing editor.” “Chamber, Voice, announce merger. I mean, award nominations.” “Nalley addresses questions, concerns.” Each is followed by a story that relies on, plays on, explains, the title. When there is no title, but only “Letter to the Editor,” it doesn’t sound very interesting. Why would I write a Letter to the Editor? I don’t even know the editor. I’m writing a letter to address the public. Something I see as unusual. Alarming. Perhaps a view opposite of the status-quo. A rebuttal. Maybe a plea: for justice. Fairness. Perhaps just a thought. Maybe a good deed has been done. Recognition. Thankfulness. Magazine articles have titles; people have titles; movies have titles; newspaper articles have titles; books have titles. Most certainly “Letters to the Editor” should have titles. Something that draws attention. Captures the imagination. Informs the people in few words. Something of which the body of the written work can dance around. Tease. Elevate. At the very least, explain. Clearly, “Letter to the Editor” serves none of these purposes. I have not, however, let “no title allowed” deter me from my work, which is to CONSTANTLY STIR THE POT. This may ruffle some feathers. Upset some. Make people uncomfortable. But it’s all in good fun. A curmudgeons job. Cantankerous. So please, let us put titles on our “Letters to the Editor”. Everything has a title. Even the Editor.
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