Longlisted for the 2014 Miles Franklin Literary Award
Tracy Farr's acclaimed debut novel is the fictional memoir of Dame
Lena Gaunt: musician, octogenarian, junkie.
'Compelling reading' The Listener
I hold one regret from that day: that I put my first love, my cello,
aside. But it was to take up a bigger love, a greater thing; it was to
step into the future. Music's Most Modern Instrument. And I was to
become Music's Most Modern Musician.
Tracy Farr's debut novel is the fictional memoir of Dame Lena Gaunt:
musician, octogenarian, junkie. Documentary filmmaker Mo Patterson
approaches veteran musician Lena Gaunt after watching her play at a
festival in Perth: her first performance in 20 years.
While initially suspicious of Mo's intentions and reluctant to have her
privacy invaded, Lena finds herself sharing stories from her past.
From a solitary childhood in Malacca and a Perth boarding school, to a
glittering career in Jazz-age Sydney, to quiet domesticity in a
New-Zealand backwater, Lena's is a life characterized by the pull of the
sea, the ebb and flow of passion and loss, and her enduring relationship
with that extraordinary instrument, the theremin.