Born | Riga, Latvia |
---|---|
Language | Latvian |
Nationality | Latvian |
Alma mater | University of Latvia |
Notable works | The Green Crow |
Notable awards | Raimonds Gerkens Prize (2012) |
Kristīne Ulberga (born 1979) is a Latvian novelist and a winner of the Latvian Literature Annual Award (2013).
Biography
Kristīne Ulberga was born in Riga in 1979. She obtained a degree in theology from the University of Latvia.[1]
Career
Ulberga began her writing career with a young adult novel Es grāmatas nelasu (I Don't Read Books) in 2008.[1] It was written in response to her partner's son who did not like to read in order to encourage him to do so.[2]
The debut work received the Jānis Baltvilks Prize. Two more novels in this series appeared that same year: Es grāmatas nelasu 2 and Virtuālais eņģelis (The Virtual Angel).[1] These books were adopted into the Latvian school curriculum, and optioned for film rights.[2]
Published in 2011, Ulberga's Zaļā vārna (The Green Crow) was her first book for adults. It received the Raimonds Gerkens Prize,[1] and the Latvian Literature Annual Award for best prose work.[3] An English translation was published in 2018 by Peter Owen Publishers as part of the Peter Owen World Series: Baltic Season (ISBN 978-0-7206-2025-2).[4]
Selected works
- Es grāmatas nelasu. SIA ALIS. 2008. ISBN 9789984986180.
- Es grāmatas nelasu 2. Brīvais Mustangs. 2009. ISBN 9789934808418.
- Virtuālais eņģelis. Apgāds "ALIS". 2008. ISBN 9789789932801.
- Zaļā vārna. Dienas Grāmata. 2012. ISBN 9789984887104. / The Green Crow Peter Owen Publishers 2018 ISBN 978-0-7206-2025-2
- Tur. Dienas Grāmata. 2017. ISBN 9789934546419.
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Kristīne Ulberga". Investment and Development Agency of Latvia. Archived from the original on 9 March 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
- 1 2 Caridei, Giovanna (29 July 2016). "A colloquio con Kristine Ulberga…" (in Italian). Recensioni Libri. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
- ↑ "Latvian Literature Annual Awards presented". The Baltic Course. 19 April 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
- ↑ Curtis-Kojaković, Susan (28 July 2017). "From Slovenia to Spain: The Peter Owen World Series". LA Review of Books. Retrieved 10 September 2017.