The Liverpool Poets are:
ADRIAN HENRY (1932–2000) studied art and worked as a painter of modern art. In 1967 he founded the poetry and pop group Liverpool Scene and soon turned to full-time writing. He felt inspired by the economical use of the language of the modern media: the language of advertising, the slogans of newspaper headlines and the sound patterns of pop songs. ADRIAN HENRY's poem The Entry of Christ into Liverpool presents the everyday scenery of the city partly as an enumeration of objects visible, partly as a collage of well-known slogans.
ROGER MCGOUGH (* 1937) studied geography and French in order to become a teacher. In the 1960s he joined the satirical pop group The Scaffold. He has produced poems, a number of plays and a mini-novel. For example, he wrote The Cats' Protection League,a poem both for children and adults.
In his poem, The Icingbus, ROGER MCGOUGH explores experimental ways of expressing ideas by writing words together. For example, the term “hunchbackedback” merges two words (hunchback + -ed ending + back) into one long word, emphasizing the unusual shape of the handicapped person's back.
BRIAN PATTEN (* 1946) has become well known as a writer of poetry, children's books and modern fables. In his opinion “poetry is a private thing in itself … it's nothing to do with educating or saying anything.” Poems by BRIAN PATTEN are Into My Mirror has walked (a love poem), The Most Unforgettable Character, Somewhere Between Heaven and Woolworth's (1967), Little Johnny's Final Letter (a poem about growing up) from the collection of poems Little Johnny's Confession (1967).