I’m Fine :a true story of trust, betrayal and exploitation
I’m Fine :a true story of trust, betrayal and exploitation
hardback
Published:
21 August, 2025
Description
‘Honest storytelling at its finest’ – Attitude
In 2024 a gay youth leader was jailed for 22 years. One of his victims tells why it took him two decades to call the police
In 1996, at the age of fourteen, Richard Hall met a man who changed his life. Two and half decades later, he called the police. As a result, the man was jailed for twenty-two years.
This is the story of what came before the police: how a teenage boy who had been hounded at school because he was gay walked into a world where he thought he would be safe, but which he was too inexperienced to navigate. In his naïvety, he thought what happened next was normal, or somehow his fault.
In a vivid, compellingly readable account, Hall recreates with unnerving frankness – and with surprising bursts of humour – the year in his childhood when the attention of older admirers went to his head, with lasting consequences for the rest of his life.
I’m Fine is not just the intensely moving story of one mixed-up boy’s private hell. It also stands as a powerful warning about predators operating with the impunity conferred on them by ‘community’ status.
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781785634239 |
| ISBN10 | 1785634232 |
| Number Of Pages | 384 |
| Item Weight | 352 g |
| Product Dimensions | 129 x 198 x 27 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | Eye Books |
| Format | hardback |
Media Reviews
‘This visceral true story was at once so moving that I wanted to put it down and process its contents, but equally so gripping that I couldn’t stop reading. A testament to the author’s inner strength, this is honest storytelling at its finest’
-- Attitude‘An incredibly powerful memoir. The courage, fortitude and fire it takes to share a story of this magnitude is nothing short of miraculous’
-- Diriye Osman, author of Fairytales for Lost Children‘A horrifying true story of a safeguarding fail in an LGBT youth group’
-- BBC Radio Wiltshire‘An exceptional coming-of-age story that manages to be both a joyous love letter to a time in our lives when everything seems possible and a damning exposé of those who seek to prey on us while we are learning who we are. I’m Fine is so charming and engaging and funny and sad and real that it’s hard to believe this is Richard Hall’s debut’
-- Bethany Clift, author of Last One at the Party‘Many gay men reading Richard Hall’s brave, compelling, troubling and at times traumatic coming-of-age memoir will experience shivers down their spines as they recognise aspects of themselves, their lives and their behaviours. I’m Fine should be read by all gay men for its adamantine honesty and for the unflinching and often uncomfortable light it shines on masculinity, gay identity, sexuality and power. This is an important book’
-- Neil McKenna, author of Fanny & Stella‘Hall captures what it means to be both seen and used – how predators can double as protectors, and how the lines blur when you’re young, scared and already marked. He is funny, sharp-tongued, occasionally cruel – but never dishonest. Beneath the camp, there’s something fierce and aching. This is the story of survival, told without apology’
-- Ray Robinson, author of The Mating Habits of Stags‘Richard Hall has a written a real page-turner and a superb memoir. Vivid and intriguing, it’s very far from being a misery memoir because it manages the genius trick of keeping all hindsight out of it, and almost the entire account is written from the point of view of a 15-year-old unreliable narrator. It’s a massive achievement’
-- Adam Macqueen, author of Beneath the Streets‘Touching, honest, at times disturbing, but ultimately hopeful and heartening’
‘Although this is a really dark story, there’s a lot of humour interjected to lighten the mood. Highly recommended’
-- Mike Buss * Entertainment Swindon *GoodReads Reviews
Author's Bio
Richard Hall was born in Kent and grew up in Swindon. He now lives in Malaysia with his husband and well-travelled cats. Having trained as a youth worker and participatory artist, he turned his creative attention to writing during a tough period of his life. After contributing to a lengthy investigation and court case relating to the abuse he suffered at a young age, he would now like to find ways to support other survivors.