The Big Issue

BLAKE MORRISON

My main interests when I was 16 were football, poetry and girls.

I was playing a lot of football, I had a trial for Preston North End. But throughout that year I was getting into writing poems and getting interested in the opposite sex, so football began to slip away. I was pretty shy and I went to an all-boys grammar school. I wrote terrible, miserable poems about unrequited love. But in real life I didn’t do too badly with the opposite sex, I had a few relationships. It seemed to be, growing up in rural Yorkshire, things got going fairly quickly. I think I was just 14 when I first went to the pictures with a girl. My sex life began probably before it should have.

The 16-year-old me would have found ridiculous the idea that one day I would write about my family.

I was trying in 1993]. He just didn’t get the point of reading, which I was increasingly into, because if you’re reading you’re sitting down – you need to be doing stuff. You need to be out there mowing the grass for me or helping me wash the car or... just get off your arse was his attitude. He was quite an overbearing man. I was closer to my mum. I was my mum’s only son. I felt close to her. She was a quieter, more self-effacing person than my dad. I felt I could emotionally open up to her in a way I couldn’t to him. But in general I definitely felt I needed to get away. Poetry was an escape really, from my family.

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

More from The Big Issue

The Big Issue5 min read
Taylor Swift’$ Eras Tour Is A Statistician’s Fever Dream, With Eye-bulging Numbers Raining Down Like A Ticker Tape Parade.
POLLSTAR, the live music business publication that tracks concert revenues, had already hailed Eras as the first billion-dollar tour for its US leg (running intermittently from March to August last year) where she sold 4.3 million tickets, with an av
The Big Issue1 min read
Art
Featuring work by young Scottish artists aged 30 and under, Sensation is a new exhibition staged by Project Ability – a Glasgow-based visual arts charity and gallery supporting people with learning disabilities and mental ill-health. It takes inspira
The Big Issue4 min read
‘Estates Brought People Together’
For council house kids of the 1980s like me, Our House by Madness was an anthem and an affirmation. The Conservative government was flogging off social housing and celebrating ownership – slowly, paying rent to the local authority became something to

Related Books & Audiobooks