Salt & Skin by Eliza Henry-Jones (Blog Tour)

I was drawn to Eliza Henry-Jones’s fifth novel, Salt & Skin (2022), by the setting: the remote (fictional) island of Seannay in the Orkneys. It tells the dark, intriguing story of an Australian family lured in by magic and motivated by environmentalism. History overshadows the present as they come to realize that witch hunts are not just a thing of the past. This was exactly the right evocative reading for me to take on my trip to some other Scottish islands late last month. The setup reminded me of The Last Animal by Ramona Ausubel, while the novel as a whole is reminiscent of The Night Ship by Jess Kidd and Night Waking by Sarah Moss.

Only a week after the Managans – photographer Luda, son Darcy, 16, and daughter Min, 14 – arrive on the island, they witness a hideous accident. A sudden rockfall crushes a little girl, and Luda happens to have captured it all. The photos fulfill her task of documenting how climate change is affecting the islands, but she earns the locals’ opprobrium for allowing them to be published. It’s not the family’s first brush with disaster. The kids’ father died recently; whether in an accident or by suicide is unclear. Nor is it the first time Luda’s camera has gotten her into trouble. Darcy is still angry at her for selling a photograph she took of him in a dry dam years before, even though it raised a lot of money and awareness about drought.

The family live in what has long been known as “the ghost house,” and hints of magic soon seep in. Luda’s archaeologist colleague wants to study the “witch marks” at the house, and Darcy is among the traumatized individuals who can see others’ invisible scars. Their fate becomes tied to that of Theo, a young man who washed up on the shore ten years ago as a web-fingered foundling rumoured to be a selkie. Luda becomes obsessed with studying the history of the island’s witches, who were said to lure in whales. Min collects marine rubbish on her deep dives, learning to hold her breath for improbable periods. And Darcy fixates on Theo, who also attracts the interest of a researcher seeking to write a book about his origins.

It’s striking how Henry-Jones juxtaposes the current and realistic with the timeless and mystical. While the climate crisis is important to the framework, it fades into the background as the novel continues, with the focus shifting to the insularity of communities and outlooks. All of the characters are memorable, including the Managans’ elderly relative, Cassandra (calling to mind a prophetic figure from Greek mythology), though I found Father Lee, the meddlesome priest, aligned too readily with clichés. While the plot starts to become overwrought in later chapters, I appreciated the bold exploration of grief and discrimination, the sensitive attention to issues such as addiction and domestic violence, and the frank depictions of a gay relationship and an ace character. I wouldn’t call this a cheerful read by any means, but its brooding atmosphere will stick with me. I’d be keen to read more from Henry-Jones.

With thanks to Random Things Tours and September Publishing for the free copy for review.

 

Buy Salt & Skin from the Bookshop UK site. [affiliate link]

or

Pre-order Salt & Skin (U.S. release: September 5) from Bookshop.org. [affiliate link]

 

I was delighted to help kick off the blog tour for Salt & Skin on its UK publication day. See below for details of where other reviews have appeared or will be appearing soon.

15 responses

  1. Elle's avatar

    Ooh, the comparisons to Kidd and Moss are promising!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Tonally, it did remind me a lot of The Night Ship, which I know you enjoyed more than I did.

      Like

  2. Laura's avatar

    Oh love the sound of the setting of this one!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      All I have to see is ‘Scottish island’ and I’m there!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Klausbernd's avatar

    I read this novel because I like the Orkneys and researched about selkies last year for an article. The style of this novel was too conventional for my taste: Too much plot and too little style. For my taste, the best book about the Orkneys was written by Amy Liptrott (The Outrun) in 2016.
    Happy weekend
    Klausbernd 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      If it’s style you want, I’m sure you’ve read Orkney by Amy Sackville.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Klausbernd's avatar

        Yes, I enjoyed it.

        Like

  4. margaret21's avatar

    Hmm. I was with you on this till you compared it with the Night Ship & Night Waking, as I was only OK with, rather than excited by these two books.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It is its own book, of course … reading an excerpt might be what you’d need to do to decide one way or the other.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. margaret21's avatar

    Of course. What it’s more about is how much effort I put into sourcing it. Our library service doesn’t hold it, for instance.

    Like

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      That’s understandable; it’s a small publisher.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. margaret21's avatar

        I’m glad to say that of itself, this isn’t a deal-breaker at our service. They’re pretty good with less-than-mainstream stuff.

        Liked by 2 people

  6. Liz Dexter's avatar

    This sounds really interesting – prob a bit dark for me but the ace character means I am going to point a friend in its direction!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I may be overstating that; it was really a tiny mention, just Min saying she’s not interested in any of that stuff while talking with Darcy about his love life.

      Like

      1. Liz Dexter's avatar

        But she’s a valid character in the book still, presumably, so all good!

        Like

Leave a reply to margaret21 Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.