Praise for When the Ground Is Hard: Winner of the L.A. Times Book Festival Prize for Young Adult Literature - 2019 A Kirkus Reviews Best Young Adult Book of the Year 2019 Josette Frank Award Winner - 2020 A YALSA Best Fiction Pick - 2020 A Westchester Fiction Award Winner 2020
"Excellent writing and an evocative setting make this novel a standout." Booklist, starred review
Turpin reads with a musical African accent. She makes fine distinctions among the characters voices and embodies Adele s swiftly shifting emotions. American missionaries have clipped accents, and male characters sound credible. The richly evoked setting may be strange to American readers, and the vivid racism may be shocking, but teens will be drawn into the girls growing friendship and search for self. Booklist, starred review on audiobook
"Accidents, lies, thefts secrets dead bodies, and illicit rendezvous make for riveting reading in this taut novel." School Library Journal
"When the Ground Is Hard heralds a truly unique literary voice. In prose poetic and fierce, Malla Nunn gives us profound insight into the racial and class pecking order in 1960s Swaziland and the violence that shapes women s and girls lives and their futures. Taut, ambitious a stunning debut." Marina Budhos, author of the award-winning Watched and the forthcoming The Long Ride
"The gorgeous imagery sets the scene wonderfully an engrossing narrative that gently but directly explores complex relationships." Kirkus Reviews
Racial prejudice has never been exclusive to the United States, and this title provides American readers with a sensitive exploration of how it affected a very different place. School Library Connection
Absorbing . . . A cautionary tale as well as a coming-of-age one . . . When the Ground Is Hard may be historical fiction, but its themes are as modern as ever. Book & Film Globe
Swaziland-born Nunn writes with keen perception of an intricate caste system and the layers within it . . . Readers will find plenty to discuss here as they explore the parallels in our own culture. The Bulletin of the Center for Children s Books
Praise for Malla Nunn's Detective Emmanuel Cooper Series:
"Superlative." Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Gripping and thoughtful . . . Nunn brilliantly combines character and fair play clues." Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Stellar" Publishers Weekly, starred review
"With this gripping sequel...Nunn deftly balances suspense and deduction." Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Consistently engaging." Booklist
"Unforgettable." The Sydney Morning Herald
"Historical hindsight may make readers a bit more self-congratulatory about recognizing the evils of apartheid, but it won t help them see around the curves Nunn has plotted or rise above her insight into the enduring dilemmas of her separate-and-unequal world." Kirkus Reviews
"A disturbing book with a morally compelling hero." Booklist
"An engrossing and compelling read . . . saturated with the feel of 1950s South Africa." Mike Nicol, author of the Revenge trilogy
"The suspense is irresistible, and the mystery sustains itself well. This is a wonderfully effective addition to Nunn s already masterful series of novels. A highly recommended novel." Historical Novel Society
"This well-plottedbook is like a jigsaw puzzle whose pieces fit together with a terribleprecision, and yet can be read with hope that the good guys will prevail. (Itis a series, after all.) Recommended for anyone who loves a good mystery with acomplicated, tough protagonist worth falling for." Historical Novel Society
"Malla Nunn s books have it all: fast-paced, intricate storylines; an exotic setting in a dangerousera; a deeply flawed hero; and an Oscar-worthy cast of supporting characters." Bookpage
"We're fortunate indeed that writers like Malla Nunn are here, working on books like PRESENT DARKNESS. This is crime fiction that goes into an area of human behaviour and a history that needs to be held up to the light, remembered, examined and understood." Reviewing the Evidence
After her family migrated to Australia to escape apartheid, Malla Nunn graduated with a double degree in English and History and then earned a master of arts in Theater Studies from Villanova University. Faced with a life of chronic under-employment, she dabbled in acting and screenwriting. She wrote and directed three award-winning films including Servant of the Ancestors, which won best documentary awards at film festivals in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Zanzibar and was shown on national television in Australia. She has published several adult books and has received two Edgar Award nominations. She married in a traditional Swazi ceremony. Her bride price was eighteen cows. She now lives and works in Sydney, Australia.