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tunesday – holly throsby interview
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tunesday – holly throsby interview

By Staff Writer
11 October 2016

We asked the Sydney songstress what inspires her work (including her debut novel).

Holly Throsby is certainly prolific. Not only does the Sydney songstress have a new album in the works (in fact, she’s mixing it right now), she’s also just released her debut novel, Goodwood, a mysterious tale about folks in a small country town. We asked her what inspires her work and what she’d like to drink with Virginia Woolf.

holly throsby 1

When did you first pick up a guitar? When I was about eight years old. I wanted to play so much and then I found an old nylon string guitar discarded on the street near where I lived. I took it home and learnt. I still have that guitar.

What was your first song about? It was about traffic lights. I wrote it when I was 10.

What usually inspires a song? Things I overhear people say; images that come to my mind; other people’s stories or my own story; big and small events; walking; books.

What inspired your novel, Goodwood? I was inspired by small towns I’ve spent time in and some news stories I read. I wanted to write the kind of story that I would want to read. Some of my favourite TV shows, films, books, songs – they found their way in there in some line of dialogue or even just a single word.

What’s the story about? It’s about two people who go missing from a small town in NSW in 1992. The narrator is Jean Brown, who is 17 when the events take place. It’s a mystery, a portrait of a town, and Jean’s own story.

When are you at your most creative? When I feel like I am buzzing all over with ideas. It comes and goes but sometimes I get into a real state over it. I stay up late working on things till all hours and can’t wait to start up again the next morning. It’s a great feeling that is always followed by a period of low mood and exhaustion.

If you could have a drink with any novelist, dead or alive, who would it be, and what would you drink? Virginia Woolf. I find her fascinating. I’ve read some of her diaries and I find her books incredible. We’d probably drink gin. I’d ask her how she feels.

What’s something that writing Goodwood taught you about yourself? That I enjoy a challenge more than I thought I did. That when I am writing a book I feel as if I am living in two worlds at the same time – the real one and the fictional one – and that I really love that feeling.

Head this way to check out Goodwood.

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