As the adaptation of her novel, little scratch, returns to the London stage, the author and Nottingham Forest fan traces the links between theatre, fiction and the beautiful game

When I was six, my family’s tin of felt tips began to deplete. I don’t know whether anyone noticed, or how many disappeared. Memory is fickle like that: it doesn’t care for the whole story. What I do remember is that, nights in a row, I would carefully select my least favourite colour before sequestering the pen in my school bag like a top-secret agent. The pens were for a boy in my class who had set me an entry fee. If I wanted to play football at break, then there was a cost. I knew it was because I was a girl, and that it was unfair, but still I handed over my felt tips. The only thing that really mattered was the football.

I never expected that my love of football and my life as a writer would have much overlap, but they do. The space for imagination – for what your mind can build – is vast in football. The experience of being a football supporter is complicated and dramatic, and that’s what I love about it. I love the emotions, the bias, the narrative built into watching a game.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Two women and three girls found dead in Arkansas home

Authorities say the five people were all related and are treating the…

Girl shot dead in Liverpool after gunman chased man into house, say police

Nine-year-old killed after assailant fired gun ‘with complete disregard’ for anyone in…

The reform of prisons has been my life’s work, but they are still utterly broken | Frances Crook

Prisons are fundamentally unjust, but a small, ethical and compassionate system would…