SYNOPSIS
Love Letters for the Heart is not a book meant to comfort, but to speak.
To speak before time turns desire into regret, love into silence, and truth into a question asked too late.
This book brings together letters written from the edge: the precise moment when a person decides to speak—or to remain silent forever. There is no decorative sentimentality here, no easy promises, but texts that take the risk of naming what is so often postponed out of fear, politeness, or habit.
Across its pages coexist letters that dare to interrupt inertia—declarations addressed to someone known only by sight, to a silent obsession, to a date proposed before one grows old asking, "What if I had…?"—alongside letters of rupture, dry and necessary, where love does not disappear but becomes uninhabitable.
The book moves through uncomfortable territory: confessions that put friendships, stability, and reputation at risk; texts in which loving means accepting loss as the price. There are also erotic letters that do not describe bodies, but tension, waiting, and excess—where desire is written as language, and imagination takes the place of anatomy.
In its final section, the book becomes more radical: letters addressed to the author's future self—seven intimate interrogations about truth, love, fear, limits, the body, and forgiveness—and letters written for posterity, from an awareness of death, one's own or another's, when there is no longer room for artifice.
The reader will find no answers and no moral lessons. What they will find is an emotional cartography of love when it ceases to be a promise and becomes a decision, a rupture, a desire, or a legacy.
Love Letters for the Heart is a book for those who understand that writing a letter is not a romantic gesture, but a dangerous act.
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