Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!
Rate this book!
Write a review?
What do you do when you lose your home and your husband is dying? You walk. An inspiring tale of love, loss and the cards life deals us. Every bookworm should read this book.
So loved these books, can’t wait for more
Not as good as the first book, but well worth reading.
Loved the story, loved hearing so much about Cornwall. Skim read some sections but overall a really good first book and a very readable second book.
Raynor Winn writes so beautifully. How can these be her first published works?
I couldn’t put this book down- I wanted to be on the salt path with Ray and Moth. A very empowering story that made me cry, laugh and move to the seaside.
This second volume about the salt path and its aftermath is not a patch on the first one entitled the salt path. It starts off great but then it desccends in to something kind of cheesey and predictable. When she says no you automatically realize that it means yes and all that talk of rejection and failure well, it just fails to convince. I understand ehr insecurities but there were times when i just wanted to slap ehr or shake her or something. It’s all very well clinging to the driftwood of li...
You should read this book! Raynor Winn is a great author
From the deliciousness that salt can offer when bringing you back to earth....to the hope and possibility of silence, and "The sound of connection".These two books take you along on a gentle saunter through often treacherous landscapes, where Ray and Moth endure."Nothing was permanent, anything could or would change"Reading these books together was a true pleasure topped off with the pithy realisation that "Nothing can be measured in time, only change, and change is always within our grasp, alwa...
Read "The Salt Path" - and a couple weeks later The Wild Silence. Raynor Winn is a remarkable writer and details thoughts and ideas in such a thoughtful way. The fact that her stories are true just adds to the sincerity of the story. Couldn't hardly put the book down