Dear Kyle Smith, Kyle. Kyle, Kyle, Kyle. Hi. You don’t know me. But like many others, I feel as if I know you, after reading your heartfelt letter to a fictional character from a story in The New Yorker . Your letter detailed the ways in which you felt Margot, a 20-year-old who does not exist, had made some real mistakes in her romantic life. This was, of course, very shocking. Fictional characters, by and large, make unerringly perfect decisions usually, and this is why we find them so compelling and relatable.
Dear National Review Guy Who Wrote An Open Letter To The 'Cat Person' Girl...
Dear National Review Guy Who Wrote An Open…
Dear National Review Guy Who Wrote An Open Letter To The 'Cat Person' Girl...
Dear Kyle Smith, Kyle. Kyle, Kyle, Kyle. Hi. You don’t know me. But like many others, I feel as if I know you, after reading your heartfelt letter to a fictional character from a story in The New Yorker . Your letter detailed the ways in which you felt Margot, a 20-year-old who does not exist, had made some real mistakes in her romantic life. This was, of course, very shocking. Fictional characters, by and large, make unerringly perfect decisions usually, and this is why we find them so compelling and relatable.