Kirsten Thorup (born 1942) is a Danish author.

Kirsten Thorup
Born1942
Gelsted, Funen, Denmark

Background and education

edit

Kirsten Thorup was born in Gelsted, Funen, Denmark in 1942. After a brief stay in Cambridge as an au pair, she studied English at the University of Copenhagen, dropping out after her first year.[1]

Literary works

edit

Thorup is the author of poetry collections, a volume of short stories, works written for films, television, and radio, but is best known for her novels, established as one of the most widely read novelists in Denmark. Her novel Baby has been translated into English. Her novel, Den lange sommer, was published in Denmark in 1979. Thorup's writing has moved from modernist experimentation to a more realistic style, her novels typically have female protagonists. Thorup's two most recent novels are set in Germany during World War II and follows the widow Harriet who lost her husband on the east front.[2][3]

Kirsten Thorup was awarded the Nordic Council Literature Prize in 2017 and is mentioned a contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature.[4]

Kirsten Thorup now lives in Copenhagen.

Bibliography

edit
  • I dagens anledning (short stories) – 1968
  • Baby (novel) – 1973
  • Lille Jonna (novel) – 1977
  • Den lange sommer (novel) – 1979
  • Himmel og helvede (novel) – 1982
  • Den yderste grænse (novel) – 1987
  • Elskede ukendte (novel) – 1994
  • Bonsai (novel) – 2000
  • Ingenmandsland (novel) – 2003
  • Erindring om kærligheden (lit: Memory of love) (novel)
  • Indtil vanvid, indtil døden (novel) – 2020[5]
  • Mørket bag dig (2023)

Recognition

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Savin, Serge (21 April 2022). "Kirsten Thorup: »Jeg følte mig enormt ensom og fremmed på universitetet«". Uniavisen. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  2. ^ Baby by Kirsten Thorup from LSU Press Archived 21 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  3. ^ "Kirsten Thorup". forfatterweb.dk.
  4. ^ "Hvis en dansk forfatter vinder Nobelprisen i aar kunne det vaere hende". jyllandsposten.dk.
  5. ^ Hegdal, Ola (6 May 2021). "Nazi-elitens diskrete sjarm". NRK (in Norwegian). Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  6. ^ Litteraturpriser.dk Akademiets Store Pris
  7. ^ "Overvældet Kirsten Thorup takker for nordisk litteraturpris". DR. Ritzau. 1 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2017.