<p>Q. Instead of forwarding messages one by one in Outlook 2010, is there a way to send a bunch of separate e-mail messages as one big message?</p><p>A. Microsoft's Outlook 2010 program offers an easy way to round up different messages and combine them into one master message to be forwarded on to new recipients, which can be helpful if you need to collect all the mail related to a certain event or project. To do so, select the separate messages in your Outlook mailbox by clicking them while holding down the Control key.</p><p>Once you have selected all the messages, go to the Home tab, then to the Respond group, and click the Forward icon. Outlook then collects the messages you selected and adds them as an attachment to a new message that you can send. On the recipients' end, the forwarded mail can be read by clicking each subject name in the attachment area of the main message.</p><p>The process works similarly in Microsoft Outlook 2011 for the Mac. Those using Apple's own Mail program can also forward multiple messages as attachments by selecting them in the mailbox, going to the Message menu and choosing "Forward as Attachment." Selecting just the Forward option also corrals all the selected messages, but it combines them all into text blocks within the message body instead of making them attachments.</p><p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/02/technology/personaltech/forwarding-multiple-messages-in-outlook.html">Keep reading...</a></p>