Ana Ristovic
Ana Ristovic est née à Belgrade (Serbie) en 1972, ville où elle habite. Elle a publié plusieurs ouvrages de poésie : Snovidna voda (Dreamwater) (1994, Branko Radičević's prize), Uže od peska (Rope of Sand) (1997), Zabava za dokone kćeri (Party for Lazybones Daughters) (1999, Prize of Branko Miljković and Prize at the Book fair in Igalo), Život na razglednici (Life on the postcard) (2003), Oko nule (Round the Zero) (2006), and P.S – Selected Poems (2009) – Prize Milica Stojadinovic Srpkinja, 2010.
Elle a aussi reçu The German prize for young European poetry Hubert Burda Preis (2005).
Les poèmes d’Ana Ristovic paraissent dans diverses anthologies et revues. Ils sont traduits en anglais, allemand, slovaque, français, macédonien, slovène, polonais, bulgare, suédois et finlandais. Ses livres traduits sont parus en Slovénie, Slovaquie et Allemagne.
Ana Ristovic traduit aussi des romans et des recueils de poésie slovènes en serbe.
Ana Ristović was born at 5th April 1972 in Belgrade, Serbia. She has finished comparative literature at the Philological faculty in Belgrade. She has published the following books of poetry: Snovidna voda (Dreamwater) (1994, Branko Radičević's prize), Uže od peska (Rope of Sand) (1997), Zabava za dokone kćeri (Party for Lazybones Daughters) (1999, Prize of Branko Miljković and Prize at the Book fair in Igalo), Život na razglednici (Life on the postcard) (2003), Oko nule (Round the Zero) (2006), and P.S – Selected Poems (2009) – Prize Milica Stojadinovic Srpkinja, 2010. She has also received German prize for young European poetry Hubert Burda Preis (2005).
Her poems have been translated into English, German, Slovakian, French, Macedonian, Slovenian, Polish, Bulgarian, Swedish and Finnish language and have appeared in several domestic and foreign anthologies, and magazines. Her books of poetry have been translated and published in Slowakian, Slovenian and German language.
She is also translator from Slovenian into Serbian language, and in her translation since now have been published 18 books of modern Slovenian prose and poetry.
Lives in Belgrade.