Lethbridge Herald

Rocker Dickinson writes life story

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Bruce Dickinson used to think that writing an autobiogra­phy should come at the end of his career. A bout with throat cancer changed his mind.

After his recovery, the Iron Maiden frontman began writing his life story, filling up a stack of legal pads in longhand. Now the fruit of his labour has led to the recently released, “What Does This Button Do?”

The 59-year old rocker recalls turning down an offer to do a book 10 years ago, saying “I’m not really done yet.” After being diagnosed with cancer, “I thought there’s an outside possibilit­y I might be done sooner than I intended.”

In the book, Dickinson covers the rise of Iron Maiden, his love of fencing, his difficult upbringing, the creation of albums and becoming a licensed airline pilot. He ends the book with his victory over cancer.

“When I got all clear of that, then the question got revisited, and I went, ‘You know what, this is a really good end point for a book.’ Not that I’m planning on going anywhere else and checking out, but this is kind of the beginning of the rest of my life,” Dickinson said.

And while Dickinson convenient­ly excludes the dirt on his personal relationsh­ips and barely touches on band politics, he does reveal some personal demons, especially in a passage that chronicles being bullied as a child. Those bad experience­s at boarding school had a lasting effect on him.

“A really nasty bullying experience, whatever, it never leaves you,” he says. “It leaves a permanent mark on your insides and that manifests in different people in different ways. With me, it makes me very angry. I get really cross, you know. If I see somebody else being bullied, it makes me really angry. So it’s a bit like Hulk. You don’t want to see me when I’m angry.”

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