April Fools!
There will be no ultimate happiness here. This is an April Fools post, as this is the one holiday perfectly suited to a group of crime writers. Pranks, shenanigans, jokes, hoaxes, hijinks, and general all-around tomfoolery. Maine Crime Writers will share their favorite April Fools’ antics of misbehaving. Pranks played on others, clowning they were the victim of, ones they have written or read about, or capers burbling in their minds, ready to come out.

Matt Cost went through a spate of five or six years where he was the victim of a cruel and vicious prank played upon him by his wife and four children. Imagine the scene, if you will, four giggling children at the breakfast table, a wife studiously avoiding eye contact, and a bleary-eyed Matt stumbling into the kitchen to get the day started. To the cupboard for a coffee mug. Giggle-giggle. Open the fridge. Creamer. Giggle-giggle. To the coffee pot. Pour a cup. Giggle-giggle. The dog’s water bowl is low, so Matt reaches over to pick it up. The tittering at the table is about to explode. Matt puts the bowl in the sink, hesitates, ponders some thought of the day, and then turns the faucet on. Immediately a spray of water jets horizontally across soaking his pants. Pandemonium erupts behind him. Matt has fallen, once again, to the classic April Fools prank of a rubber band around the kitchen faucet sprayer, so that when the water is turned on, it comes from the sprayer and not the regular faucet. Silly Matt. Six years in a row.

Kait Carson Not an April Fool’s joke, but a cat who dialed 911. Meet Starlight – and note the double dewclaw that provided her with the means to commit the crime. Late one night, the unmistakable sound of humans in my backyard woke me. I reached for the bedside phone, a landline, and heard dead air. My cell lived on its charger in the kitchen. I belly-crawled through the house, grabbed the cell, and called 911. The dispatcher insisted that the people in my backyard were cops responding to a 911 call. The resulting conversation bore more resemblance to Who’s on First than What’s your Emergency. By this time the cops were in the house and I noticed the kitchen landline was off the hook. When I replaced it, Starlight jumped on the counter and walked over the phone, hitting a speed-dial button with her sixth toe and knocking the handset from the cradle. Mystery solved, and the joke was on me.
Kate Flora: Not an April Fool’s joke but a longer running one. In the small Maine town where I grew up, there was a drug store with a lunch counter where people gathered in the morning for coffee. One gentleman who was rather a blowhard was always holding forth about something, and evidently someone else (all unnamed, of course) decided to play a trick on him and see how he’d react. So, for months and months, said gentleman would receive postcards from all over the country. Unsigned, they would only say: Your sand is coming. When a card was received, he could be relied on to come to the counter and rant about it. After many months of cards announcing that the sand was coming, he came home from work one day to find his driveway blocked by an huge pile of sand.
John Clark: My favorite AF experience came when I was the librarian in Hartland. Beth and I had recently returned from a trip to California. At the time, I was writing a weekly library column about the library and for the first one in April of that year, I wrote about smuggling a rattler egg I’d bought in a curio shop on the trip. My assistant loaned me a baby rattle and we put it in a cardboard box with a blanket overt it and a sign inviting patrons to view a baby rattler. Someone read the column, panicked and called both the sheriff’s department and the local game warden. When they entered the library, serious as all hell, one dad who was reading to his toddler and had already been ‘had’ by the prank, was laughing so hard, I was afraid he was gonna drop his child. I explained to the two officials that nowhere in my article had I mentioned snakes, only a baby rattler. They left and it was difficult to tell if they were more amused or embarrassed.
Allison Keeton: My favorite practical joke is one that needed help from my Swiss pen pal, Beatrice. She was here in the U.S. visiting one August when I was in college, and UConn had announced there was a shortage of dorm rooms. Another friend of mine and I decided to play a joke on our boyfriends who had an apartment. Beatrice stayed in the car while we went into the apartment. Then she, in a country-bumpkin costume, knocked on their door, holding a suitcase and a flyer we had made with their information on it, advertising a room for sublet. Of course, they had no extra room. They were quite concerned about how many of these flyers were out there, who had distributed them, and how many more people would come knocking. It was very difficult not to laugh. We did not confess to the joke, and, in my generosity, I offered to take the poor foreign college student home with me for the night. Almost forty years later, is it naughty that this story still brings a smile to my face?

Beatrice in her “poor little ol’ me” costume, 1986
The last person hanged in Maine, a British immigrant named Daniel Wilkinson, was dispatched in Thomaston in November 1885, only a few months after Capone and Santore.
Next week at Maine Crime Writers there will be posts by special guest Tim Queeney (Monday), Kaitlyn Dunnett/Kathy Lynn Emerson (Thursday) and Kate Flora (Friday), with a group post on Tuesday and a writing tip from Kate Flora on Wednesday.



I’ve talked before about my dysfunctional past, and parts of the novel were semi-biographic. The plot was simple: a kid who grew up on the streets of South Boston, and hung out on the fringes of a local mob, learns that the mob boss plans to set him up to take the fall for a murder. He flees. He has no trade, can barely read or write, and quickly learns he has to do something to survive. He asks himself where he could go where the mob would never look for him. He comes to a conclusion: I’ll join the military. The Navy, Air Force, and Army turn him down. He realizes that he has one last chance. He knew a friend who had been arrested, and the court gave him a choice: join the Marines or go to prison. The Marines take him on. They were involved in the Vietnam War, and infantry troops were in demand. He enlists, goes to Vietnam, and wins the country’s highest award, the Medal of Honor. He believes that he’s got it made now… He had no idea how wrong he was.
When I was still working full time, especially when I was traveling, I had a pretty strict schedule. Up, hit the treadmill or the hotel gym, shower, coffee, off to work. The only bummer about that (other than the work part) was that I didn’t get to really linger in the shower, which is my absolute best place for writing ideas. I did, however, get ideas in the car during my weekly drive from Cambridge to Philadelphia: five hours of highway time that also sometimes led to some really good writing ideas (I’d send myself voicemail messages).
Kate Flora: Recently, I made the exciting discovery (which everyone else probably already knows) that I can put my manuscripts on my kindle and they read like any other book. So much fun. Also so helpful in seeing bad punctuation, missing words, awkward scenes, and things that just generally need to be rewritten. I started with some of the “books in the drawer.” Kindle lets me make notes, so I could see what I had to go back and fix. Now, of course I have a whole lot more revision to do than was already on my desk. I may be done with books that were “almost done” around about the turn of the next century.
I wasn’t discouraged. I was riding the high of possibility. My career was going to take off. This would be my break out book. Alas, it did not. Another sad story for another day. But they did put some energy behind it and I enjoyed some of those perks like someone to escort me on a local book tour. All of that faded away, though. My agent didn’t like the next book, which after many rewrites was published in 2024 as Burn the Diaries and Run. And then the agent decided to stop agenting and go find himself.

Peter O’Toole delivers the line “Dying is easy, comedy is hard.” I’m not convinced being deliberately funny isn’t one of the most difficult tasks in writing there is. Which is why I’m in awe of writers who can do it, comedians who can tap into whatever receptive vein we have with humor. I suppose it could be a learnable skill—you can learn to dance, even if I haven’t. But the downside of failed humor is that, when it falls flat, it’s not only sad, but it annoys. And the last thing any of us wants to do is annoy our readers.
More than 50 years later, as a published writer (take THAT Sister Catherine!), I not only am not bothered by the notion of ideas “not being original,” I embrace it.












