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'Bald, ugly male seeks nimpho'
03/11/2006 20:47 - (SA)
London - If your romantic fancy leans
towards serial embezzlers, self-harming flautists or beardy
physicists known as Naughty Lola then you should advertise for a
mate in Europe's biggest-selling literary review magazine.
The venerable London Review of Books has published a
compendium of the weirdest and funniest advertisements from the
eccentric readers who write to its personals column seeking
love, sex or simply correspondence with like-minded people.
Long seen as cold fish compared to the torrid Latin lovers
of Italy and France, the book, titled They Call Me Naughty
Lola, shows that Britons are not all stiff-upper lip with this
collection from the world's strangest lonely hearts section.
"Woman, 32, needful of the finer things in life seeks
stinking rich bloke, 80-100," one ad says. "Must be willing to
fibrillate his ventricles when he becomes tiresome or bankrupt
or both. Also interesting thirtysomethings for illicit, immoral
affair to be conducted concurrently with the above."
Flaunt their foibles
In a big departure from other personal ads with their coded
GSOH (good sense of humour) and promises of good looks and fun,
Review readers flaunt their foibles and parade their oddities in
a mild-mannered display of that special British madness.
"Medication free after all these years!," says another,
apparently from a psychiatric ward. "Join me (anxious,
overweight, self-harming flautist, F, 34) for congratulatory
drink (or seven) in side ward of nation's finest."
In their search for a soulmate, men trumpet their
flatulence, baldness and kleptomaniac tendencies, sometimes with
alarming frankness.
"Bald, short, fat and ugly male, 53 seeks short-sighted
woman with tremendous sexual appetite."
One offers to make yours a truly family Christmas.
"Obnoxious, drunkard uncle for hire, 62. Belches the
national anthem in three octaves, scratches inappropriately and
is seemingly never satisfied by your very best efforts. Is
dinner ready yet - and if not, why not? December will be magic
again at Box no. 5610."
Started out as genuine effort
The personals column is the creation of London Review of
Books advertising director David Rose (M, 32, married) who also
edited They Call Me Naughty Lola.
Surrounded by a colourful mix of contributors, subscribers
and London eccentrics at a party to launch the book, Rose said
he started the personals column in 1998, imagining a genuine
lonely hearts section for the sensitive and erudite.
Then his first submission arrived.
"67-year-old disaffiliated flaneur picking my toothless way
through the urban sprawl, self-destructive, sliding towards
pathos, jacked up on Viagra and on the look-out for a
contortionist who plays the trumpet."
Rose held out for serious submissions but to no avail.
Eventually he succumbed to the column becoming a notice board
for the strange, hilarious and downright bizarre.
"It became very clear very quickly that it was going to be
very silly," he told Reuters in an interview at the book launch.
He suspects that many ads are written for laughs, but has
had calls from indignant advertisers, angry because they've paid
80 pence ($1.53) a word and haven't received a single response.
"And I'm like that's because you spent the whole time
talking about your mother and your wooden leg," he said.
Taken together, the ads provide a curious kaleidoscopic view
of Britain, its capital and the unusual lives of its denizens.
One commuter desperately seeking someone writes:
"You were reading the BBC in-house magazine on the Jubilee
Line (12 November). I was coughing hot tea through my nostrils.
Surely you can't have forgotten? Write now to smitten,
weak-kneed, severely burned, bumbling F (32, but normally I look
younger). I'll be quite a catch when my top lip has healed. And
this brace isn't forever."
The ads have resulted in marriages, children, at least one
divorce and countless liaisons.
But love among the literati can also be elusive.
Susan Wolfe, (F, 60, but looks much younger) says she wrote
an "embarrassing number of ads", but has now stopped.
So far she's had responses from a serial killer in a US
prison, an "infection-free" pensioner and a date with a
cross-dresser who took her shopping to find himself a gold lame
miniskirt and a union jack thong before lunch at a rundown
Chinese restaurant on her 60th birthday.
"I lost my sense of humour," she said.
- Reuters
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