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April 17,2025
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Mark Kurlansky is a historical writer who does what one reviewer referred to as the “little-big” style of writing, that is to say, he takes something little and often overlooked and from it he spins out larger truths about society and the world. To say that he does this well would be an understatement.

Salt: A World History, his fascinating history of this overlooked cooking seasoning, makes a couple very good points in its introduction. Because of its current cheapness and easy availability, we nowadays tend to forget that wars were fought, empires rose and fell, and fortunes were made and lost all on the basis of salt. Entire buildings have been constructed of salt, methods of transportation have been begun for moving salt, religious rituals around the world make use of salt, and it is the only rock we eat.

Nearly everyone I’ve mentioned the book too gives me the same look. A book about salt? that look says. How could that possibly be interesting?A much drier history could be written that was more cohesive if you wished to focus on one specific element, such as the development of salt procurement technologies, replete with graphs and tables. Instead, Kurlansky has written a lively book that moves about with rapidity and brio, never bogging down in any area.

While at times the author seems to suggest a little too freely that salt was the main ingredient in important historical revolutions (the American, the French, Ghandi’s in India), he does at least add this element so lacking in most other stories. If his partisanship as a salt historian has him shaking his salt cellar a little too aggressively over world events, consider it a corrective. Where he might have spent a little more time near the book’s conclusion is the environmental impacts of road salt and the increasing salinization of fresh water sources from this and due to rising sea water levels.

Most of the ancient practices for salt collection, such as filling a clay jar with brine, then letting the water evaporate out, then refilling with brine until the accumulated salt filled the jar, then smashing the jar open, persisted for thousands of years. The oldest human remnants in North America are such jar shards. On a large scale, this was done with a series of artificial ponds, brine pumped into one, set to evaporate for several months, then that water pumped into another lake to be replaced with fresh brine and so on. There are also, all over the world, brine springs and large pure veins of salt in the earth.

This early form of salt, irregular and large chunky crystals, impurities in the supply leading to discolorations, prone to clumping as well as oozing brine in humidity, was prized nonetheless. It often served as a means of trade and was bartered for other goods.

Near Salzburg (“Salt Town”), a collapse of a mountain in the middle ages uncovered a well preserved salt miner dating back to 400 BC, completely preserved even down to his leather pouch and brightly colored fabrics. Three miners were found in total, these were known to the Romans as Gauls (“Salt people”). These celtic types spread out as far as possible, going as far as being found perfectly preserved in Asian salt mines.

The Roman Empire (after defeating the Gauls and absorbing all their salt technology, their salted meat recipes, among other things) was the first peoples to declare common salt, that is, salt as a right belonging to all citizens. Most Italian cities were founded along nearby salt works. The first great Roman road, the Via Saleria has a name that might give it a clue as to what was behind its construction.

Salt was such an important part of Roman culture that two rather popular words in English still used today date from their original usage. The etymology of the word “salary” comes from the Romans paying their men in salt. To pay the large Roman army on the nearly continual German campaigns, generals would often set up salt evaporation ponds. Roman salt works lasted for centuries, some of them being taken over by the French monarchy and used in the 1300s.

Likewise, the origin of the word “salad” is from the Roman habit of salting their green vegetables to moderate the bitter taste, the word meaning “salted.” That one still buys canned green beans among other vegetables with salt already added is a testament to our tastes having long roots.

Later Venetian city state power was built on salt. Merchants there realized that selling and trading salt was actually more profitable than salt harvesting, and thus outsourced the salt production to Indians and Chinese and others. All imported salt supplied by Venice had to pass through the government for regulation, taxation, etc. As the money came rolling in, the Venetians had to expand their buying and their navy sailed farther and farther afield. The Venetian navy doubled as a military force and would police the Mediterranean, seizing ships and searching them for illegal salt transportation. Perhaps their most famous traveler would be Marco Polo who traveled along the Silk Road and met Kubla Khan.

Fish itself became a Friday food because of the Catholic Church’s expansion of “fast days” on which one was also supposed to abstain from sex. Red meat was seen as a “hot meat” and thus had sexual connotations, while aquatic meat were considered “cool” and thus unlikely to provoke salacious thinking. The legal penalty for eating meat on Friday in England was hanging and this law stood on the books until King Henry VIII broke with the Catholic Church.

In the American Revolution, salt would come to play am important role. With the supply of Liverpool salt obviously cut off, the very first patent issued in the United States was for a refinement on salt production. Several battles engaged in by George Washington were to secure and hold the American salt production locales and supplies. Several measures were passed by the Continental Congress advocating salt production in each colony. Pamphlets were published and distributed freely among the colonists for bay salt production. Exemptions were offered to salt works letting their workers out of military service; New Jersey would allow each facility to exempt up to ten men.

This importance extended itself in history through the American Civil War as well. Secession exposed the South’s desperate lack of salt works. The Union blockade from England was designed to prevent the importation of Liverpool salt through the port of New Orleans. An army essentially could not subsist without salted meat which prevented spoilage and allowed for long marches. Wherever they marched, Union armies attacked Confederate salt works and when captured, they destroyed them. When the Confederates captured (or retook) a salt works, they celebrated. This shortage of salt is best demonstrated when Lee surrendered to Grant. As part of terms, he asked the conquering general for food, stating that his soldiers hadn’t eaten in two days.

Prior to the Civil War and just after the American Revolution, the Erie Canal’s backers and the surveyor who pushed the idea, presenting it first to President Thomas Jefferson then later to New York business interests after Jefferson denied them, were salt manufacturers. It was eventually built and one of its main products shipped was salt. The Trans-Ohio Canal from the Ohio River to Cleveland carried nothing but salt.

Nearby a ten-mile stretch of the Kanawha River through what is now West Virginia managed to set up the best salt works in America, giving the earlier established Onedega salt works in New York a run for its money. Cincinnati grew as a city, grew from salt pork due to Ohio grown hogs and Kanawha salt. Eventually, the Kanawha salt makers were crushed by the New York Onedega salt works’ friends in government who passed laws making it harder for the Virginia firm to compete.

Back overseas, The British East India Company’s salt policy, featuring the usual bad elements such as high taxes and a brutal enforcement policy, prohibitions on salt production at one point (when the Indian salt works produces cheaper salt than Liverpool), and a deaf ear to poverty, eventually got noticed by a small fellow named Ghandi. His salt campaign was launched through the India National Congress. He marched to the Indian Ocean with 78 followers (the number rising to thousands) and after a ritual purification, he waded to the shore and scooped up a large crystal of salt, thus breaking the British laws. All over India, people began scooping up salt, making salt, mining salt. In that single moment, that single act, the British lost their colony for all time.

Salt has always been a part of our history. Without it, health suffers; with too much of it health suffers. How much is good for you and how much is bad for you seems very particular based on where you live, your activity level, and your genetics. Kurlansky addresses this in closing, but it’s just circles. The exact formula can probably never be argued with certainty due to any number of factors playing a role, but what is without question is that salt, that simple little rock, so common today as to be given away freely at restaurants, is still important and will always be important.

In the way the world works, circularly, the various colored, irregular salt crystals of the past, which were spurned when whiter, purer salt was regularized and when consistency of shape and size was prized, are now seen as artisanal salts. They have now become the expensive style salt whereas they used to be cheaper salt eaten by the poor. The coloration of the salt is merely an indication of differing kinds of dirt in the product. Pure, regular white salt crystals are now the salt of the poor. What comes around goes around.
April 17,2025
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This book reads like a pamphlet entitled "1,001 Exciting Facts About Salt" that might be published by an organization called "The National Salt Council" and given away to people who tour the Morton salt processing plant.

Do you want to hear about how fish is salted? Good. Because if you read this you will. You'll hear how the people of every nation on earth (Italy, Catalonia, England, France, China, Florin, Guilder, Uqbar, etc) salted every single possible kind of fish (herring, cod, herring, anchovies, herring, salmon, herring again, bablefish etc. etc.). How about cabbage? Do you want to know how sauerkraut has been made by oh so many more nations than just the Germans? You're in luck there too.

You'll also hear about how salt is produced. Mined, reduced from water, extracted from plants... all the people who have ever lived have done it in the same handful of ways and you get to hear about it again, and again and again and again.

I felt like I was being water boarded with an endless gusher of tedious salt related information.

Before buying this book I found myself wondering, "how is this guy going to make 400 pages of salt interesting?" The answer is, of course, that he doesn't. I have to admire the tremendous amount of research Kurlansky clearly put into this, but I wish he had pruned it down to 75 pages.
April 17,2025
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Why I chose to read this book:
1. this was one of the first books that I added to my WTR list since I love learning about various microhistories; and,
2. June 2023 is my "Nonfiction Month"!

Praises:
1. I thought that author Mark Kurlansky included several interesting facts about salt, the only edible rock, especially about how nations thrived from the use of salt, and how salt taxes sometimes brought about revolutions;
2. informative maps, photos and illustrations were interspersed throughout the book; and,
3. I enjoyed the mention of the folktale Dear as Salt. A lovely retelling is written by Rafe Martin.

Niggles:
1. the writing was very repetitive and, at times, confusing! Seems like every culture and/or country that needed salt processed it the same way, with a few technological tweaks here and there. It often digressed and felt disorganized. Sometimes, chapters were left hanging;
2. portions of this book were devoted to cod fishing and/or the Basques, often not even mentioning salt! When I realized that this author also wrote books titled Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World and The Basque History of the World: The Story of a Nation, I got the feeling that Kurlansky borrowed information from them to pad up this book;
3. I wasn't expecting so many recipes! Although some were interesting in a historical way, others barely mention salt as a vital ingredient; and,
4. I was; however, expecting to read about cultural superstitions involving salt. Explanations about why it's bad luck to spill salt and the reasoning behind throwing salt over one's left shoulder would have been compelling to read about, even a nod towards da Vinci's painting "The Last Supper" alluding to the symbolism behind the overturned salt cellar near Judas Iscariot's elbow. This should have made an honorable mention.

Overall Thoughts:
I hate to abandon a book, especially since I was so invested to read it! But when I began to dread picking it up and found myself nodding off after reading a couple of paragraphs, I had to admit to myself that life is too short, and that I had to move on. Very disappointed that it just wasn't for me.
DNF at 65%.
April 17,2025
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A beautiful exploration into the role this substance has played in the human grand narrative.
The first two thirds were very informative and interesting, but it wasn't until I got to the section about India that I was totally enthralled. The story of how Ghandi used the British imposed salt laws, and his disobedience of them, to gain freedom for his country was truly riveting.
I can't help but draw parallels between this story and other moments in history. It's long been a fact that civic rebellion follows punitive costs associated with the fundamental materials of life. The tea tax in the American colonies, poll taxes, whiskey taxes. I'm sure an economics historian or a political scientist could find many more relevant examples than I can.
Now we find ourselves entering into a similar scenario with the crippling price of gasoline. The present rise in the cost of gas isn't because of taxes entirely, although they do play a significant role in certain states such as California.
Our current predicament with fuel prices can't be laid at the feet of government because the government is not in control, big business is. Which represents a whole different problem.
What really rises to the surface in book like this is the same old ancient story: yet another example of those in power screw those who aren't to the wall.
April 17,2025
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Pretty boring, fairly disorganized, but occasionally has some interesting information. I love fish eggs of any kind so I kind of enjoyed that (very short) part in particular. If the apocalypse hits this book would probably be handy since we'll have to figure out how to obtain salt and keep food fresh all on our own. ;)
April 17,2025
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This is a well-written survey about salt throughout history and must be the most definitive tome ever written about the topic. That’s where a slight problem lies, where there are so many details, the text starts feeling like a list with a few sentences added to each item.

As if that’s not enough, the book leans so heavily toward salted fish that a reader starts wondering if this book is about salt or fish. Which is it? I joked that perhaps I should keep looking at the book's cover to remind myself that this book is indeed about salt.

That’s not to say this is a bad book. Many parts of it are fascinating, such as the role of salt in the American Civil War, the value of salt through time, and its perfection by the Morton company into individual crystals.

If you’re interested in salt, this is the book for you. But you’d better settle in for a long read because it feels like the author was being paid for the times he mentioned the word “salt.“ If that’s the case, he became a dazzlingly wealthy man.
April 17,2025
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A very boring book, and it's not a history book, what's a history book have with being crammed full of cooking recipes? and how would that help showing the 'world' history as the title says?

Much attention was given to the history of salt in the U.S as compared to the fast skimming through early civilizations in Europe/ fertile crescent area and Asia.

When I first started the book I found the introduction very gripping and was anticipating a good read full of useful information, but to my later disappointment the book only got worse the more I read, it even ended abruptly with no conclusion wrapping up the story of Salt or afterword by the author like any respectable book I've read before.

MiM
April 17,2025
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Officially two stars is supposed to mean "it was okay" and one star is supposed to signify "I didn't like it," but there are many degrees of books I dislike and this one was moderately better than it could have been. The writing is OK, Kurlanky has energy, but he attacked this work of non-fiction with no clear agenda.

If there's a thesis beyond "salt is important," Kurlansky fails to articulate it. If there's a logic to how this book is organized, that's not clear either. Chapters don't seem to be chronological or geographical, and they don't build to form a broad picture or gradually make an argument. As I was jolted from one fascinating anecdote to another, I gradually grew angry with "Salt." How can someone with so much writing ability and so much research put it all between two hard covers and not try to make anything big or important out of the whole deal?
April 17,2025
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Fun book on the topic of salt.

Kurlansky writes about common every day things and how they affect the world. So far my favorite of his books is "Cod", but this one is right up there.

Everything you never wanted to know about Salt and were afraid to ask.
April 17,2025
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If you are like me, you might be wondering how anyone could write an entire book about salt. Well, I have not only wondered that for a while, but now I have read the book! Having done that, I can honestly say that I don’t think you can write an entire book about salt. That is a far cry from fascinating and possibly just barely interesting. This is not to say that there is not a lot to be said about salt. But I did not find it that captivating a topic.

I knew two things about salt. I was aware of Gandhi and his march to the sea to make salt in defiance of the British rule in India. The fact that salt was an important part of the Economy, and the politics is some thing that was true in a great many places during a great many times in the history of the world. And there are great naturally occurring deposits of salt in a wide variety of locations.

The other thing that I knew about salt in addition to Gandhi, was that, there was a bagel place next to the Long Island Rail Road station where I occasionally caught a train into New York City in the 1980s. They sold salt bagels. These were like no other salt bagels you are likely ever to see. They were literally covered with salt. I think since then people have become much more sensitive about how much salt it is good to consume. But back then I would buy two of these Salt bagels, and they would be my nutrition for the day.

I also was reminded in this book that they mine salt underneath the city of Detroit. This is quite an extensive operation, and one that I was aware of when I grew up in a suburb north of Detroit, but had somehow forgotten. There are great natural occurrences of pure salt, in a great many locations in the world. People have been obtaining it for many uses for as long as there has been history.

And there is an extensive bibliography at the end of the e-book for people that are looking for sources of information about salt and its extensive history in the world. Having listened to this audible book, I am much more aware of the significance of souls in the world. It is just so much more proof that there is a lot to know about so many things, and that we have the opportunity to pick and choose what we delve into.

My advice would be to skip this particular book, and the wealth of information about salt as some thing that you could live very nicely without!
April 17,2025
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I read half of this book before taking it back to the library. It does a good job of capturing and holding your interest. Sometimes passages can go on too long, like with some of the Roman stuff. That's why skipping around might be good for you.
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