The Salt Archive
Riverhead Books · 2023
A code hidden in shipwreck salvage. A family unraveling in real time.
Latest novel
A Novel
A code hidden in shipwreck salvage. A family unraveling in real time.
Read an excerptRiverhead Books · 2023
Bibliography
Riverhead Books · 2023
A code hidden in shipwreck salvage. A family unraveling in real time.
Riverhead Books · 2021
Memory as evidence. The past as crime scene.
Riverhead Books · 2019
Three generations of women keeping the same impossible secret.
Riverhead Books · 2017
A debut novel written in the debris of loss.
Read an excerpt
The Salt Archive, Chapter One (pp. 11–12)
The logbook was wrapped in oilskin, which was itself sealed inside a copper cylinder the size of a rolled umbrella. Nora had opened hundreds of preservation cylinders — they were standard issue on merchant ships from the 1820s onward, a technology borrowed from the postal service — and she had found the usual contents: manifests, insurance documents, the occasional letter. She had never found what she found in this one.
The first forty pages were exactly what the manifest promised: cargo records for a schooner called the Patience, out of Greenock, September 1847. Wool, oilcloth, three crates labeled iron fittings that never arrived at their destination in Aberdeen because the Patience went down in the Firth of Forth during a storm on the fifth of October. All of this was known. All of this was in the Lloyd's Register.
What came after page forty was not in the Register.
A cipher. Dense, meticulous, organized into columns. She photographed every page before touching it further, the habit of twenty years. Then she looked at the cipher more carefully and felt the particular cold she associated with archive rooms and revelations: the cold of something that should not exist.
The shorthand was her mother's.
Critical acclaim
Voss writes with the patient ruthlessness of a forensic examiner. The Salt Archive is a novel of perfect compression — every sentence load-bearing, every revelation earned.
Where Silence Accumulates confirms Voss as the inheritor of Penelope Fitzgerald's legacy: precise, pitiless, and quietly devastating. One of the finest British novels of the past decade.
The Glass Inheritance is a masterwork of structural audacity. Voss moves across seventy years of family history without a wasted word, locating in the smallest domestic details the exact weight of inherited silence.
A debut of devastating emotional precision. Fieldnotes on Grief is unlike anything published this year — formally inventive, intellectually rigorous, and shot through with grief so controlled it becomes a kind of beauty.
As reviewed in
About the author
Eleanor Voss writes novels at the intersection of historical mystery and psychological fiction. Her books have been longlisted for the Booker Prize, shortlisted for the PEN/Faulkner Award, and translated into fourteen languages.
Born in Glasgow, she studied history at the University of Edinburgh, where she wrote her undergraduate thesis on archival silence and disappeared records — a preoccupation that surfaces in all four of her novels. She has been a writer-in-residence at the British Library and a visiting fellow at Princeton.
She lives in Edinburgh with too many books and not enough shelf space. She writes every morning, submits to no social media, and sends a monthly letter to readers from her desk.
Awards & recognition
On the road
Festival
Charlotte Square Gardens, Edinburgh
In conversation with journalist and critic Lucy Kellaway on The Salt Archive, archival fiction, and the ethics of reconstructing the past.
Gala
American Museum of Natural History, New York
Reading from The Salt Archive and remarks on literature, archives, and freedom of expression.
Reading
Shakespeare and Company, Paris
Evening reading and signing. The Salt Archive in paperback will be available at the event.