Goldsworthy has published numerous essays on music and cultural issues, including many articles for
The Monthly. Her memoir
Piano Lessons was released by
Black Inc in Australia in September 2009, and internationally by
Macmillan in 2010. It was shortlisted in the 2010
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards for Best Non-Fiction and in the 2010
Australian Book Industry Awards in the categories of Best Non-Fiction and the Newcomer of the Year, winning the latter. The book was sold to
St. Martin's Press in the U.S., and the film rights to the book were sold to director
Ana Kokkinos in 2010. Goldsworthy is credited alongside her father,
Peter Goldsworthy, as writing the stage adaptation of
Maestro Welcome to Your New Life, also a memoir, was released by Black Inc in March 2013. Goldsworthy adapted it for the stage for the
State Theatre Company South Australia's closing play for the 2023 season, an idea raised by artistic director
Mitchell Butel. Goldsworthy wrote a
cabaret show,
Cole, performed by
Michael Griffiths at the
Festival Theatre, Adelaide in the
Adelaide Cabaret Festival in June 2015, for which he won a
Helpmann Award for Best Cabaret Performer in 2016. She published her third book,
Melting Moments, her first work of fiction, on 3 March 2020. It is a domestic book set in
South Australia beginning in 1941, with the main character, Ruby, who travels to Adelaide. It was officially released at the 2020
Adelaide Writers' Week, with an interview of Goldsworthy and Black Inc. author
Anna Krien, who discussed how it felt going from "fact to fiction". Goldsworthy wrote the libretto for
Victorian Opera's award-winning production of
The Magic Pudding, staged in October 2013. She wrote the libretto for their December 2022 production of
A Christmas Carol. ==Academic positions==