Published in Overland Issue Print Issue 199 Winter 2010 · Writing / Main Posts Salt Adam Ford He steps out onto the dry, white lakebed. Hears the crunch of crystals underfoot. Tries not to imagine whiteness creeping over rubber and dusting leather on its journey to his ankle. He keeps his feet moving all the same. He understands the science: the shallow root systems of introduced plants, the water that rises from deep underground, bringing with it things that are best kept buried. He invokes the mantra of electron transfer, of ionic bonds that form when water evaporates. Magnesium sulphate. Calcium sulphate. Sodium chloride. He knows the physics and the chemistry of it all, but when he bends down on one knee and takes a pinch between his thumb and fingers, feels the grains’ sharp edges intent on piercing skin, he knows it isn’t salt he’s standing on. It’s the powdered glass they put into the flour. Adam Ford Adam Ford is the author of Man Bites Dog, The Third Fruit is a Bird, Not Quite the Man for the Job and Heroes and Civilians. He has written for Australian Author, Desktop, Going Down Swinging and Cordite. He blogs at theotheradamford. More by Adam Ford › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 20 March 20262 April 2026 · Main Posts Final results of the 2025 Judith Wright Poetry Prize Editorial team Established in 2007 and supported by the Malcolm Robertson Foundation, the Overland Judith Wright Poetry Prize seeks outstanding poetry from new and emerging writers. This year’s judges, Shastra Deo, Harry Reid and […] 20 March 202620 March 2026 · Main Posts Final results of the 2025 Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Editorial team Established in 2007 and supported by the Malcolm Robertson Foundation, the Overland Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize seeks outstanding original short fiction of up to 3000 words themed loosely around the notion […]