Olga Flor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Flor was born in Vienna. She grew up in Vienna, Cologne and Graz and completed her Matura at Akademisches Gymnasium Graz.[1] Flor studied physics and history at the University of Graz.[2] From 1997 to 1999, Flor stayed in Modena.[1] The monologue Fleischgerichte premiered in 2004 at the Graz theater.[3] She has worked for multimedia enterprises,[2] written several books and received literary awards like the Anton Wildgans Prize in 2013.
She's a member of the Grazer Autorenversammlung.[4]
Awards
- 2013 Anton Wildgans Prize[5]
- 2018 Droste Prize[6][7]
- 2019 Franz Nabl Prize, Graz[8]
Works
- Flor, Olga (2002). Erlkönig : Roman in 64 Bildern (in German). [Graz]: Steirische Verlagsgesellschaft. ISBN 3-85489-066-4. OCLC 50871418.
- —— (2005). Talschluss : Roman (in German). Wien: P. Zsolnay. ISBN 3-552-05332-8. OCLC 57730044.
- —— (2008). Kollateralschaden : Roman (in German). Wien: Zsolnay. ISBN 978-3-552-05440-0. OCLC 237882435.
- —— (2012). Die Königin ist tot Roman (in German). Wien: Zsolnay. ISBN 978-3-552-05578-0. OCLC 809326759.
- —— (2015). Ich in Gelb : Roman. Salzburg: Jung und Jung. ISBN 978-3-99027-067-7. OCLC 904540928.
- —— (2017). Klartraum Roman (in German). Salzburg: Jung und Jung. ISBN 978-3-99027-096-7. OCLC 985976288.
- —— (2018). Politik der Emotion (in German). Wien: Residenz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-7017-3423-8. OCLC 985981218.
- —— (2020). Morituri : Roman (in German). Salzburg: Jung und Jung. ISBN 978-3-99027-246-6. OCLC 1245786862.[9]
