Here's how you add everything to a MAILTO link:
<a href="mailto:YourName@YourSite.com? cc=someone@YourSite.com&bcc=someoneElse@YourSite.com &subject=Shipping%20Information%20Request&body=Please%20tell%20me%20if%20my%20order%20has%20shipped!">Shipping Request</a>
Each component is separated by the ampersand (&) sign. Only the first component after the initial email address has a question mark (?) preceding the ampersand.
URL-encode is the key! So for your example of a body, instead of your
href='mailto:me@me.com?subject=Me&body=<b>ME</b>'
...you might try:
href='mailto:me@me.com?subject=Me&body=%3cb%3eME%3c%2fb%3e'
Here's another route you might try. Create a javascript function to open an ActiveX object. This has the unfortunate limitation of only working in IE and Outlook, and may cause your page to show activex warnings. But if you can live with these caveats, it does the job. Here's a working sample you can draw from:
<html>
<head>
<script type='text/javascript' language='javascript'>
function OpenOutlookNewEmail()
{
try
{
var outlookApp = new ActiveXObject("Outlook.Application");
var nameSpace = outlookApp.getNameSpace("MAPI");
mailFolder = nameSpace.getDefaultFolder(6);
mailItem = mailFolder.Items.add('IPM.Note.FormA');
mailItem.Subject="Me";
mailItem.To = "me@me.com";
mailItem.HTMLBody = "<b>ME</b>";
mailItem.display (0);
}
catch(e)
{
alert(e);
// act on any error that you get
}
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<a href='javascript:OpenOutlookNewEmail()' >email</a>
</body>
</html>