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 ==