Song of the Saltings by RACHAEL KING is an atmospheric YA fantasy, stepped in folk horror, misty bogs, and ancient sacrifice to the sea monster The Grimm.
Read on for a Q&A with the author.
MEET RACHAEL KING
What first sparked the idea for Song of the Saltings?

Brack is such an eerie setting – how did you build that sense of place?
Writing atmosphere and place is one of my favourite things. I try to engage all the senses when bringing a place to life, and to not overly describe it. I concentrate on the way a place makes me feel and choose a few choice details to convey that to the reader – the quality of the light, or the popping of the bog in the stillness. One of my characters, Moss, is very tuned into nature so I looked at it through his eyes as well. I definitely like to engage the pathetic fallacy – where a landscape reflects the moods of the people moving through it (literally in this case), and also using it to create a sense of foreboding … and a sense that nature is out of our control. Music is very important to me when creating an atmosphere. I have a whole playlist of dark folky songs that helped me.
Did any real places or environments influence how you imagined Brack?
Yes! I travelled to the Outer Hebrides in Scotland to get a sense of the landscape, and I went even further afield to St Kilda, a group of islands 45 miles west of the Harris and Lewis. It was inhabited for thousands of years until 1930, when life got too hard and was abandoned. The village is still standing and the sheep the islanders farmed are still there, wild, along with millions of sea birds. It’s an incredibly moody, dramatic place, that feels full of ghosts. I wanted to learn about and to understand what life might be like on a cold island cut off from the rest of civilization. To be clear, Brack is not supposed to be Scottish; it’s a made-up place that resembles those islands physically, including standing stones and a deep past, but it is its own place. I listened to the music I mentioned while I was there, and plugging back into it is like stepping into a magic portal back to the place when I am writing.

I’m not sure how the Glimm was formed. I needed a creature, and it just presented itself to me as this mysterious thing as I wrote. You don’t meet the Glimm until the end of the book, so I had plenty of time to work out what it was and what it meant to my main character Lotta, who finds herself somehow connected to it after it spares her from sacrifice. We meet her eight years later once the islanders have stopped sacrificing children and use horses instead. I was finding out about the Glimm and Lotta’s connection alongside her in the first draft!
Did any character surprise you as you were writing?
All my books seem to have a character who arrives from nowhere and makes a big impact. In this book, it’s the character of Sadie, a hideling girl. When she first walked onto the page, this is what poured from my fingers: “Sadie has a knack for blending in … She slips unnoticed into the straw of a cart, the stacks of peat, melts into the grey of the stone shops and buildings. Her hair is the colour of dried mud, her skin pale and forgettable. People look right through her, only realising they’ve seen a girl when she’s already passed. They turn to check again, but by then she’s vanished into shadow, and they doubt their own eyes.”
I don’t know where that came from, but I can tell you, these qualities came in very handy later on.
Did any folklore or myths influence the story?
There are shades of serpent-like creatures such as the Lambton Worm in the Glimm, and the myth of Andromeda’s sacrifice to the sea monster, but it was just as much influenced by Shirley Jackson’s ‘The Lottery’ and the film The Wicker Man as it was by ancient myths. I did steal Jenny Greenteeth, the bog hag, and put her in the bog as the character Jenny, the witch everyone is told to be afraid of to keep them safe from the treacherous bog, but who has her own story.
What do you hope readers take away from Lotta’s journey?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rachael was named Best Reviewer at the Voyager New Zealand Media Awards in 2023, received a Waitangi Day Honour Award for her work at WORD Christchurch in 2020, and was awarded the 2025 Frank Sargeson Fellowship. She sometimes writes for adults too.
Visit Rachael King’s website here.









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