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The Salt Road

The Salt Road

Jane Johnson

4.09
666 ratings·269 reviews

The vast desert stretches before them, concealing the amulet's ancient secrets... From the breathtaking heights of Tafraout, Isobel is captivated by Morocco's beauty. But a fateful stumble leads her into the arms of Taïb, who discovers a hidden scroll within her unique silver amulet. Drawn to deciph...

Pages
386
Format
Paperback
Published
2010-01-01
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN
9780670917990

About the author

Jane Johnson
Jane Johnson

121 books · 0 followers

Jane Johnson is an English writer of books for adults and children and fiction book editor. As a writer she has used the pseudonymsGabriel King, jointly withM. John Harrison, andJude Fisher, as well as her real name.

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Rating & Review

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Community Reviews

269 reviews
4.1
666 ratings
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Algernon
Algernon·2 years ago
[5/10]In the attic, you will find a box with your name on it. Inside that box are what you might call ‘waymarkers’ for your life.Isobel is a successful corporate accountant in the City of London. She worked hard to achieve her position and to escape from traumatic memories of her childhood and of her dysfunctional family. Her father’s death, and an unexpected legacy, forces Isobel to confront this past and to embark on a journey to a land of myths and legends.Carrying an ancient Berber amulet wi...
Frances
Frances·11 years ago
An astonishing and remarkable adventure! Jane Johnson wrote *The Salt Road* beautifully; I could truly feel the hot desert sands beneath my feet and see the magnificence of the land through the eyes of her characters. In various chapters throughout the book, her words were quite poetic as she captured the lives of its people. As *The Salt Road* takes you along their journey, you come to know how fate does seem to push us along the many paths that must be taken. A very enjoyable book indeed, and ...
Mark Lawrence
Mark Lawrence·15 years ago
Jane Johnson's *The Salt Road* is marketed as a romance, and readers who enjoy romantic fiction might well appreciate the love story woven through its two distinct timelines. Personally, I wouldn't categorize *The Salt Road* as *just* a romance. I don't typically read romance as a genre. For me, it’s an adventure, set in an exotic locale, effortlessly educational, a travelogue... it's multifaceted. You can enjoy it on many levels, really. I attribute that enjoyment to Johnson's exceptional writi...
Amy Dal
Amy Dal·2 weeks ago
Odlična!
Monica Hills
Monica Hills·1 years ago
3.5 Stars- This book was very informative about a culture that I knew nothing about. Plus the setting was extraordinary. I think I have only ever read one other book set in Morocco. The story tells about two different women and their lives. Both women had some extraordinary events happen in their lives and they are tied together with an amulet. The ending also had an incredible twist. There were many elements that I enjoyed but this was a very lengthy book. It is listed as under 400 pages but ea...
Sue Gerhardt Griffiths
Sue Gerhardt Griffiths·5 years ago
The cryptic letter to Isabella from her late father had me intrigued and I was excited about reading further but the story very quickly moved in a different direction to what I was expecting. Desert stories set in Africa (or anywhere in the world) are just not my thing (or so I thought) and it seemed like it was heading to a one star rating but as I continued on, without warning it reeled me in and I was hooked and as the story unfolded it blew my mind. I was spellbound by the exotic setting of ...
Kaśyap
Kaśyap·10 years ago
A beautifully written story. Set in North Africa, there are two story lines here following two women, which are set about 30 to 40 years apart from each other but they might as well have been set centuries apart. Mariata is a remarkable character creation. Her story is full of passion and strength and explores the relationship between man and nature.Her vivid, personal descriptions bring the desert to life, I’ve infact learned a lot about the North African desert tribes and their culture through...
Robin Hobb
Robin Hobb·12 years ago
This book does not want to be put into a single category. But if you must, you may file it under mystery, romance, adventure or travelogue.

To me, it's just a great double weave of two stories of two very different characters, set against the same backdrop.

NO spoilers!
J
Jean-marcel·13 years ago
This novel tells the stories of Isabelle Treslove-Faucet, once a wild tomboy but now a reformed, "grown up" corporate tax accountant, and the circumstances that lead her to travel to Morrocco to uncover her mysterious past, and Mariata, a Tuareg woman and desert wanderer who experiences a host of misfortunes and travails and must make a thousand-mile journey across the Sahara on foot to protect herself and her baby from an unwanted marriage. The two narratives are set about forty years apart in ...
Nicolle
Nicolle·15 years ago
This book has an intriguing title which doesn't give any clues to what the book is going to be about which is why I entered for it on Goodreads First Reads, and when I won and it arrived I saw the cover and I just knew it was going to be a good book. The cover gives the impression of the east, which is where the majority of the book is set. The book starts off by introducing the character Isabelle and her life so far, it is written well and we get to know the traits that Izzy has, and that the...