Why we’re still hung up on landlines | Letters
Catherine Suttle remembers when numbers were three digits, Dan Zerdin's grandparents thought a naked' phone was unsightly, and Janette Ward recalls how she rumbled her boss
I smiled all the way through Viv Groskop's article (The hunt for a missing date, the numbers I'll never forget: we'll never match the magic of a landline, 2 August). It all rang true, so to speak. Never mind four digits, our family landline in the 1960s was three digits, which are embedded in my brain. Then we moved to a town and had five digits, which later became six, no less. On answering, Mum spoke these slowly and carefully until she identified the caller, then her voice could be pure joy if it turned out to be an old friend.
Ours was wall-mounted by the front door and, as Viv says, it was a sort of gateway to everything else. I remember waiting all day for a phone call from a boy I liked, willing the phone to ring until I realised Nan had cut the line while pruning the roses. It turned out to be not the best match, so maybe Nan knew a thing or two about landlines and boys.
Catherine Suttle
London