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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/4316
Drama: March 30, 2011 Issue [#4316]

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Drama


 This week: Play the Fool's Game
  Edited by: fyn
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

April 1. This is the day upon which we are reminded of what we are on the other three hundred and sixty-four. ~Mark Twain, Pudd'nhead Wilson, 1894

The trouble with practical jokes is that very often they get elected. ~Will Rogers


A man always blames the woman who fools him. In the same way he blames the door he walks into in the dark. ~Henry Louis Mencken


A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools. ~Douglas Adams

I have great faith in fools - self-confidence, my friends call it. ~Edgar Allan Poe



Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

Ah . . .April Fool's Day . . .the day of jokes and pranks, of salt in your coffee, of cars full of popcorn and spiders crawling through someone's hair. I remember my kids always, year after year, putting salt in my coffee that morning and dying of laughter at the look at my face. One year, I decided to get even. The night before, I switched the salt in the shaker for sugar and put salt in the sugar jar. I figured, I'd get my coffee sweetened 'just right' and they'd get the joke on their cereal. That was the year, they didn't do that joke and the morning they all decided on freezer waffles. I still ended up with salty coffee and they went off to school trying to figure out who pulled the joke on me. That was the year, I think, that I switched to sweetener in my coffee!

My ex left on April Fool's Day, sneaking away in the middle of the night, leaving a note, his dirty laundry and a house strangely peaceful. I spent a day insisting it 'had' to be a joke. The divorce was finalized a year later, to the day. The joke, much to his dismay, was finally on him!

Dad used to play reverse jokes on us kids. He'd come up with something outrageous that everyone thought was a joke, but in reality, wasn't. I'll never forget the time my car (a beat-up, on its last tire, held together with love and duct tape old chevy) refused to start one morning. I was going to be late for real estate classes I was taking to get my license to help mom out at work and freaking because mom would be mad at me if I mess it up. I woke up my dad to ask him for help. He looked at the car and declared it dead. I made the 'Yeah, dad, I get it April Fool, but I need to get to class.' comments to no avail. I was told they both needed their cars that day and I was out of luck. Furious and hurt that they were being no help at all, I headed for the garage seeking something that might get my car running again, or something to put it out of its misery for good. Inside was a brand new car.

April Fools jokes abound in our everyday world, and there is no reason they cannot be incorporated into writing as well. A joke can be used to further a storyline, add dimension to several characters and even inject a bit of humor as well. It could be a breaking point, a diffuser of trouble or an emotional release. It could be the basis for a short story. Consider the beleaguered heroine named April! I'll never forget the year of the April Fool Storm that buried the north-eastern US under two-plus feet of the predicted couple of inches of snow or the glitch that sent the military scrambling when no one got their pay checks on the first as was expected.

There are numerous ways that April foolery could be used within the framework of a story line. Don't be foolish. Use them!









Editor's Picks

No joke . . . this is an awesome and upcoming challenge that begins April 1st.

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#1703843 by Not Available.


Some April Fools Foolishness . . .

 One day short of being a fool  (E)
Born on March 31st and what that means
#662136 by J.J.Gowland


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This item number is not valid.
#1544967 by Not Available.


 April Fool's Joke/The false alarm  (13+)
Another one by Adrian Sole... a joke within a joke, if you get my drift...
#1211139 by Renegade_Angel


The Building  (13+)
Curiosity gets the better of me as I noticed a strange building in downtown Seattle.
#1559221 by Riot


April Foolish Madlib

 April Fools!  (E)
Gag on a magician.
#1321631 by sarmotifan


Based upon one of the all time greatest hoaxes

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This item number is not valid.
#1415602 by Not Available.







 
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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer

{user;andrew1982} offers: Fyn, thank you so much for another exceptional Newsletter, as well as the exposure for all the 2010 Quill Award winners - each is truly exceptional, as are countless others I've come across in my time here. You speak of why we write, I can't even begin to give it words here, so - I humbly submit this link
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by A Guest Visitor
to the small but determined group I founded with precisely that idea in mind. Thanks again and all my best to everyone as always. ~Drew

Fiona Hassan says: I don't know exactly why I write. I do have several reasons that I can pinpoint, but mostly because it's one of the things I can do well without trying too hard (don't we all love things like that ;P). Another motive that pushes me to write is the desire to share what is in my imagination and to put it somewhere where I myself can see it as more than just something I dreamed up. And I write because, born of two teachers, I have the compulsive urge to teach, to help others, to plant good seeds in others' souls, even if they don't realize it's happening. Heaven knows that happens in books all the time! Imply something, and the young reader will unconsciously absorb it, for good or for evil. The world needs people to sow these morals and good ideals instead of the other way around.

ChrisDaltro-Chasing Moonbeams writes: Thank you for featuring my Dear Me, written for the 2011 Dear Me: Official Contest, in your very nice WDC Newsletter - Drama, as Editor's Pick. I am proud and honored. I liked your letter from the Editor very much and admired the way you use your words to describe images and feelings.


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