MarketOlga Ravn
Company Profile

Olga Ravn

Olga Sofia Ravn is a Danish poet and novelist. She won Denmark's Beatrice Prize in 2019. Her novel The Employees was shortlisted for the 2021 International Booker Prize and the Ursula K. Le Guin Prize and longlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award and the translated literature category of the US National Book Award. Her novel The Wax Child was longlisted for the 2026 International Booker Prize.

Early life and education
Olga Ravn was born and raised in Copenhagen, the daughter of singer Anne Dorte Michelsen and visual artist and designer Peter Ravn. In 2010 she graduated from the Danish School of Authors, , in that city. == Work ==
Work
Ravn published her first poem in the Copenhagen literary magazine ' in 2008. Since then, her poetry has appeared in ', ', ', ' and '. In 2013 the collection was translated into Swedish. In 2014 Ravn published a chapbook of poetry titled Mean Girl, consisting of coloured sheets of paper and glimmering scraps. Only 250 copies were released, each prepared with individual attention so that none were identical. Mean Girl (et utdrag), a selection of Mean Girl translated to Norwegian, was published by in 2015. Ravn was editor on the 2015 book of Tove Ditlevsen works ' ('). In 2015 she published her first novel, Celestine, about a boarding school teacher's obsession with a ghost who has much in common with her. The main difference between the two, the teacher points out, is that she is not yet dead. Her fourth novel The Wax Child appeared in Danish in 2023. The English translation, by Martin Aitken, was published in 2025. Narrated by a wax doll from the seventeenth century, the novel tells the story of the doll's creator, the historical Christence Kruckow, who was executed for witchcraft in 1621. == Critical reception ==
Critical reception
In 2011, Danish Literary Magazine described Ravn's upcoming poetry collection, '''', as "a passionate, lyrical collection that deals with freeing oneself from the role of young girl". The book received other positive reviews from Danish critics who described it as "bursting with talent" and "ambitious and well-wrought". On Celestine, Søren Kassebeer of Berlingske complimented the author on her use of language: "She can achieve so incredibly much with words... There seem to be no limits to her ability to create images." Nevertheless, although he found Celestine readable, he did not regard it a complete success, commenting that it constantly dwells on feelings expressed either by the narrator or the ghost, rather than simply saying what needs to be said. Lilian Munk Rösing of Politiken was particularly impressed with Ravn's use of images and metaphors, and her command of powerful, at times humorous language. Victor Malm writing in Sydsvenskan said: "The novel [resembles] Marguerite Duras and Clarice Lispector. Through an intensive rinsing stream of scenes, images and memories an empty feeling of life ahead is evoked." In 2019, Ravn was awarded the Beatrice Prize, which recognises the quality of an author's already published work and their potential for further development. In 2021, Ravn's novel, The Employees, translated into English by Martin Aitken, was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize. The Guardian called The Employees brilliantly unusual, and said that this "clever, endlessly thought-provoking novel catches something of our recursive search for the nature of consciousness". The New York Review of Books called it a "weird, beautiful, and occasionally disgusting novel" and found that "what The Employees captures best is humanity’s ambivalence about life itself, its sticky messes and unappealing functions". In 2026, her novel The Wax Child, translated into English by Martin Aitken, was longlisted for the 2026 International Booker Prize. The Times Literary Supplement called The Wax Child "gorgeously mercurial: fragmented, slippery, unresolved". == Awards ==
Other activities
Ravn is a writing instructor at Testrup Højskole, a literary critic for Politiken, and an editor at Gyldendal. She regularly posts short writings, videos and pictures on her blog and Tumblr account. == Bibliography ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com