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Pam Ayres was born in Stanford in the Vale, Berkshire (now administered as part of Oxfordshire), the youngest of six children (having four elder brothers and a sister) of Stanley and Phyllis Ayres. Her father worked for 44 years as a linesman for the Southern Electricity Board, having been a sergeant in the Grenadier Guards during the Second ...
Pam (Pam Ayres) and Gordon (Geoffrey Whitehead) are a long-married couple who run a small garden centre. Gordon is a creature of habit while Pam longs to break out of her humdrum routine. The humour revolves around her efforts to persuade him to try something new, or at least stop holding her back.
Ayres read the poem to Deeley later in the programme saying, “We mustn’t forget people’s birthdays - the one day in all of the year for making somebody feel special, and those far away to ...
Pam Ayres, Some of Me Poetry and Some More of Me Poetry; Frances Bellerby, The First Known (posthumous) Zoë Brooks, Owl Shadows and Whispering Stone "parallel booklets" George Mackay Brown, Winterfold [22] Ciarán Carson: The New Estate, Blackstaff Press, Wake Forest University Press; Elizabeth Daryush, Collected Poems; David Day, Brass Rubbings
Poetry 100 Poems by Seamus Heaney: The Last Hedgehog by Pam Ayres: England: Poems from a School edited by Kate Clanchy: Off the Shelf edited by Carol Ann Duffy: She Must Be Mad by Charly Cox: The Last Hedgehog by Pam Ayres: The Poetry Pharmacy by William Sieghart: Young Adult A Skinful of Shadows by Frances Hardinge: La Belle Sauvage: The Book ...
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"The Flit Gun" is a poem by Pam Ayres, first published in Some More Of Me Poetry (1976). In the second prologue of Stephen King's 1979 science fiction thriller novel The Dead Zone, Gregory Stillson uses a Flit gun to spray ammonia in the face of a farm dog, establishing Stillson as the book's villain.