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Ane Riel (born 25 September 1971) is a Danish novelist.


Career

Riel is the author of four novels. Her fourth novel "Clockwork" is forthcoming by Lindhardt og Ringhof in June 2021. Her first three novels earned her seven awards and twelve nominations both in Denmark and abroad. * She debuted as a novelist with ''The Butcher of Liseleje'' (2013) that won a debut award in Denmark and was sold to Germany and Norway. * Her popular literary breakthrough came with her second novel ''Resin'' (2015). The novel has been sold to 26 countries and also been adapted into a feature film in 2019 starring Sofie Gråbøl (The Killing) and Peter Plaugborg (Winter Brothers). The novel has won several national and international awards (se list below), including the Glass Key in 2016, claiming its spot as that year's best Nordic suspense novel. * Ane Riel's third literary novel, ''Beast'' – an epic story with references to John Steinbeck's work – came out in Denmark in the Fall of 2019. Beast has so far been sold to six countries including Italy, Germany and The Netherlands. * ''Clockwork'' will be published in Denmark on 3 June 2021. Riel's novels were all written as ''literary novels'' and have been published as such in Denmark. However, the first two share a peculiarity in that they were also welcomed into the crime genre. In fact Resin won the four most important crime awards in Scandinavia which is unusual for a book that wasn't meant to belong in that genre. On their motivation for choosing ''Resin'' as the best Nordic thriller of 2016 the jury of The Glass Key Award said: "''Resin is written with a mischievous and whimsical élan, as well as solidarity with its characters, especially the oddballs and the anti-socials. There is actually a lot of amusement in this tragic story. Resin is written in the fertile borderland between strict genre and originality, the beloved cliché and the new code. Or what Umberto Eco calls the good balance in all good literature; the known is what is already seen and the shocking is what is unknown. It is in this borderland that the best thrillers are and where prizes are won''." Ane Riel herself regards her novels to be works of literary fiction. In 2016 she was also awarded the Niels Matthiasen Memorial Grant by the Ministry of Culture for her authorship thus far. The Niels Matthiasen committee called Ane Riel: "a''n author of unique talent, extraordinary courage and a rare imagination. Along with her command of the subtleties of language, she has positioned herself at the forefront of her genre in record time. She is clearly not a 'one hit wonder'. With an imagination bordering on the grotesque and her exceptional writing style, she has forged a universe entirely of her own making.''" Ane Riel's Danish publisher is Lindhardt and Ringhof. Her first two novels from 2013 and 2015 were originally published by Tiderne Skifter (in 2019 they were republished by Lindhardt and Ringhof).


Novels

*2021: ''Clockwork'' (Urværk) – to be published in Denmark on 3 June *2019: ''Beast'' (Bæst) *2015: ''Resin'' (Harpiks) – the English edition was published by Transworld in 2018 *2013: ''The Butcher of Liseleje'' (Slagteren i Liseleje)


Awards and nominations


Awards

*2019. The ThrillZone Award (The Netherlands) – ''for Resin'' *2017. The Golden Crowbar (Sweden) – for ''Resin'' *2017. The Golden Bullet (Norway) – for ''Resin'' *2016. The Glass Key (Scandinavia) – for ''Resin'' *2016. The Niels Matthiasen Memorial Grant (Denmark) – for the authorship *2016. The Harald Mogensen Award (Denmark)– for ''Resin'' *2014. Det Danske Kriminalakademis debutantpris (Denmark) – for ''The Butcher of Liseleje''


Nominations

* 2020. Nominated for the Dublin International Literary Awards– for Resin * 2020. Nominated for The ThrillZone Award – for Beast * 2020. Nominated for The Martha Award – for Beast * 2019. Shortlisted for The Petrona Award – for Resin * 2016. Finalist for The Danish Broadcasting Company's Best Novel Award – for Resin * 2016. Nominated for The Readers' Best Novel Award – Resinhttps://www.db.dk/l%C3%A6sernes-bogpris-2016


Personal life

Riel grew up in a suburb of
Aarhus Aarhus (, , ; officially spelled Århus from 1948 until 1 January 2011) is the second-largest city in Denmark and the seat of Aarhus Municipality. It is located on the eastern shore of Jutland in the Kattegat sea and approximately northwes ...
, Denmark, as the daughter of a lawyer and a children's book illustrator. In 1990 she graduated from Marselisborg Gymnasium. After moving to
Copenhagen Copenhagen ( or .; da, København ) is the capital and most populous city of Denmark, with a proper population of around 815.000 in the last quarter of 2022; and some 1.370,000 in the urban area; and the wider Copenhagen metropolitan ar ...
she worked part time for several years at the
Storm P. Museum The Storm P. Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark, is a biographical museum dedicated to the life and oeuvre of Danish humorist Robert Storm Petersen, popularly known as Storm P. In addition to his cartoons, the museum also displays his paintings, both ...
, a museum dedicated to the life and work of
Robert Storm Petersen Robert Storm Petersen (19 September 1882 – 6 March 1949) was a Danish cartoonist, writer, animator, illustrator, painter and humorist. He is known almost exclusively by his pen name Storm P. Biography He was the son of a butcher ...
(1882-1949), a Danish artist known for his comic strips and satirical work. Between 1995 and 2005 she published a total of nine children's books, among these schoolbooks about art, architecture and Storm P, as well as a few works of fiction (mostly published under her maiden name). During this time, she was also assisting and traveling with her partne
Alex Riel
one of the most significant and influential jazz drummers in Europe. The couple married in 2002. Ane and Alex live in the small village of Liseleje, Denmark. Since 2013, Riel has worked solely as a novelist.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Riel, Ane Danish women novelists 21st-century Danish novelists People from Aarhus People from Halsnæs Municipality 1971 births Living people 20th-century Danish writers