Character Study
Novelist Sarvat Hasin reads from the second chapter of her novel Strange Girls — the beginning of Alia's story. Sarvat and Freya talk about how the two narrators of Strange Girls arrived in different voices and tenses: Ava, bold and certain, who could only ever be written in first person, and Alia, quieter, rendered in a storybook third-person past. They discuss the novels woven through the book — Donna Tartt's The Secret History and Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence — and why an ambiguous relationship that's never named or declared can still change a person completely. Along the way, a conversation about what it means for writing to feel alive: raw, uncertain, and true to life, even when only a few stories have ever really been told. This is a conversation about voice, ambiguity, and the books that live inside the books we write. 🎥 WATCH the full episode HERE [https://youtu.be/3993BmiwN7U] 📘 Buy Sarvat Hasin's Strange Girls [https://uk.bookshop.org/a/11327/9780349703114] and Freya's novel: A Real Piece of Work [https://www.foyles.co.uk/book/a-real-piece-of-work/freya-bromley/9781529155433] 💛 Follow @freybromley [https://www.instagram.com/freybromley/] on Instagram for updates and to ask your questions 📚 Join Freya's newsletter at freyabromley.substack.com [http://www.freyabromley.substack.com/] for behind the scenes thoughts 🎙️ And hit subscribe [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/character-study/id1896655831] wherever you get your podcasts ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
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