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The John Foster Interview

Hello, John, and welcome.
When were you born?
During the Second World War on 12 October 1941
Where did you grow up?
In a village called Scotby, just outside Carlisle
and on a hill in Staffordshire, near a village called Denstone, where
I went away to school. I now live in Standlake,
near Witney in Oxfordshire
Do you share your house with anyone interesting?
My wife, Chris who always reads my poems and makes
interesting comments about them - and an elderly cockateal called Chino.
Bedbug, bedbug
Bedbug, bedbug, where have you been?
I've been up to London to visit the queen.
Bedbug, bedbug, what did you do?
I bit the queen's bottom!
I bit the king's too!
From "My Magic Anorak" (Oxford)
What were your favourite things when
you were young?
A big Teddy Bear who was bald (because I cut off
all his hair!) and my cricket bat with Jack Hobbs's signature on it.
And what did you hate?
The medicines I had to take when I was ill and
any football teams that beat Carlisle United.
What was your favourite story?
The poem about Albert who was eaten by a lion
at Blackpool Zoo and the stories about a superhero called Wilson in
a comic called The Wizard.
Tell us about your books
I write poetry for children and collect other
people's poems and put them in books called anthologies of poems. One of the most popular is Twinkle Twinkle Chocolate Bar -
it came out top in a survey of the most borrowed book from primary school libraries. I write about things that
have happened to me (like my poem Football Story about kicking a football through a window) and make up imaginary
poems about dragons going to school and Dracula going to the dentist.
How did it all begin?
When I started to make up poems for my own children
to keep them quiet on long car journeys.
Why do you do it?
To make children laugh and to make them think
about what happens to them and about the world they live in. And I enjoy playing with words and writing wordplay
poems.
Tall Story
Today, our teacher
Asked us to write
Lacrosse sticks in our English
Lesson. At least, that's what we thought
She said.
That's why most
Of us looked blank and
Replied, "If it's all right with
You, we'd rather write high queues instead."
from "Standing on the Sidelines"
(Oxford)
What do you do when you're stuck for
an idea?
Go out for a walk round the garden or walk down
to the village shop.
Where's the strangest place you've ever
written a poem?
On top of a snow-covered mountain in northern
Italy.
Are you writing anything at the moment?
I've just finished a book of poems called "Climb
Aboard the Poetry Plane" which will be published later this year. And there's a new anthology illustrated
by Korky Paul called "Pet Poems".

Shaun Short's Short Shorts
Shaun Short bought some shorts.
The shorts were shorter than Shaun Short thought.
Shaun Short's short shorts were so short,
Shaun Short thought, "Shaun you ought
Not to have bought shorts so short!"
from "Climb Aboard the Poetry
Plane" (Oxford)
Who's the most famous person you've ever
met?
Roald Dahl. I went to his house and he showed
me the shed where he wrote his books. But first I had to help him catch the goat.
Er... Of course you did. What did you
do before you were a poet?
Haven't you guessed? I was an English teacher!
How many schools have you visited?
I've lost count - it must be well over five hundred.
I've been to schools in Germany, Cyprus, the West Indies and Oman as well as all over the UK.
What's the most unusual place you've
read your poems?
In the middle of a field, at lunch-time, to some
children who were staying at a camp.
Of all the poems you've written which
are your favourites?
"Ten Dancing Dinosaurs", "Four
O'Clock Friday"
and "The Schoolkids' Rap"
Do you have a web page?
Not yet! But I'm working on it. Watch this space!
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