I sometimes like to write letters to companies whose products I use and admire. In August 2005, I wrote a letter to the Morris Reisman, president of Pro Sales Industries, manufacturer of some well-made, handy kitchen tools:
Dear Mr. Reisman:Yesterday a package arrived in the mail bearing a mysterious mark: RATTLE OK. Inside I found a letter of thanks from Morris Reisman and some sample products: a Rinse-No-More Mushroom Brush, a Scrub n' Wash Fruit & Vegetable Brush, a Silk Away Corn-on-the-Cob Brush, and a Nature's Way Banana Keeper. Cool!
I write as a happy user of your vegetable and corn brushes. It's a pleasure to use products such as yours, which work as advertised, are designed to last, and are made in the United States.
I have one small suggestion for improvement. The back of the corn brush package reads "That's when your corn is at it's peak of freshness." The word it's (meaning "it is") in that sentence should be its (possessive pronoun). The mistake is a small blemish on an otherwise great package. When the time comes to print a new batch, I hope that you can make this change.
In closing, I wish you continued success with your products.
Sincerely,
Michael Leddy
And the text on the back of the Silk Away package has been revised:
Its, not it's: the best gift of all. Thanks, Mr. Reisman!
Apostrophes aside, these brushes really are wonderful -- the ones that I bought in August 2005 are still good as new.
[Morris Reisman died on November 17, 2009, at the age of seventy-six.]