The Big Issue

STEVE LAMACQ

I grew up in a tiny village called Colne Engaine near Colchester. I had a little gang of about five friends but really I had nothing particularly in common with any of them. There was a group of four of us at school who did lessons together because we were considered to be reasonably bright. And when you’re the supposedly bright kids, you often end up being slightly… not ostracised, but outsiders in a way. So it can make you feel awkward and I was already a very awkward, shy teenager. As a result, I ended up creating an interior world outside the real world. From the moment I finished my homework, I kind of unlocked a door into this other world, which for me was built entirely around music. Reading the music papers

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Big Issue

The Big Issue9 min readCrime & Violence
The Dispatch
Civil servants tasked with delivering the government’s plans to criminalise homelessness have “low morale” and are tired of “crackpot Tory ideas”, a government insider working on the Criminal Justice Bill has told The Big Issue. The controversial bil
The Big Issue3 min read
Is Foraging A Way To Feel Fully Human?
To me, greens are found in the supermarket, prepackaged with a price tag. Foraging has never occurred to me. But reading foraging aficionado Andy Hamilton’s new book, The First-Time Forager, I wondered if I’ve been missing out on something spectacula
The Big Issue3 min read
Film
Would it work if it was Subbuteo? That was a question that bubbled up in my mind even as I was being happily swept along by the ravishing new film from Italian sensualist Luca Guadagnino, the acclaimed director who pierced both hearts and peaches wit

Related Books & Audiobooks