Steven Højlund

My Articles

Vita Andersen The Author Who Let the Book Speak First

Vita Andersen: The Author Who Let the Book Speak First

Vita Andersen, born in 1944 in Copenhagen, is a prominent Danish author known for her impactful poetry and novels, including “Tryghedsnarkomaner” and “Hold Kæft og vær smuk.” Her works explore societal pressures and gender roles, earning her accolades like the Danish Critics’ Prize for Literature in 1986, solidifying her literary legacy.

Read More »
Martin Andersen Nexø Iconic Danish Author and Communist

Martin Andersen Nexø: Iconic Danish Author and Communist

Martin Andersen Nexø (1869-1954) was a prominent Danish author known for his socially conscious works, including “Pelle the Conqueror” and “Ditte, Child of Man”. A passionate advocate for social justice, his writings focus on the struggles of the working class, leaving a lasting legacy in Scandinavian literature and political discourse.

Read More »
Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg Danish Painter

Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, Danish Painter (1783-1853)

Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg (1783-1853) was a pivotal figure in Danish art, renowned as the “Father of Danish Painting.” His contributions during the Danish Golden Age include over 500 works that showcase realism and rich detail. As a professor at the Royal Danish Academy, he also influenced future generations of artists with his innovative techniques.

Read More »
Olafur Eliasson

Olafur Eliasson, Whose Installations Leave People Staring at the Ceiling

Olafur Eliasson is a renowned Danish-Icelandic artist celebrated for his immersive installations, such as The Weather Project and Your Rainbow Panorama. His work blends nature, perception, and social responsibility, exemplified by the Little Sun initiative providing solar energy. Eliasson’s innovative approach bridges art and global environmental discourse.

Read More »
Johannes Vilhelm Jensen Danish Winner of the Nobel Prize

Johannes Vilhelm Jensen, First Danish Winner of Nobel Prize

Johannes Vilhelm Jensen (1873–1950) was a prominent Danish author known for his innovative narratives and exploration of human evolution. Awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1944, his seminal work “The Long Journey” combines history, philosophy, and science, influencing Danish and global literature and inspiring future generations of writers.

Read More »
Birgithe Kosovic Danish Writer Exploring Identity War and Truth

Birgithe Kosovic: Life, Career, and Literary Contributions

Birgithe Kosovic doesn’t write safe books. She writes about betrayal, nationalism, war, and the private damage done by public lies. Her novels move through personal and political territory with a clarity that rarely flatters and never evades. That’s part of what’s made her one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary Danish literature—an author who knows what she wants to say and writes until it’s sharp enough to cut.

Read More »
Christian Jungersen Master of Uncomfortable Fiction in the Best Way

Christian Jungersen: Master of Uncomfortable Fiction in the Best Way

Christian Jungersen writes books that make people uncomfortable in the best possible way. His novels—layered, psychological, and tightly constructed—force readers to sit with questions they’d rather avoid. What does it mean to be a good person? What if the self you trust isn’t reliable? What if you’re the villain in someone else’s story? These aren’t abstract provocations. Jungersen builds them into plotlines that move. You keep turning pages even as your sense of certainty starts to fray.

Read More »
Elsebeth Egholm From Journalist to Bestselling Crime Star

Elsebeth Egholm: From Journalist to Bestselling Crime Star

Elsebeth Egholm didn’t set out to become one of Denmark’s leading crime writers, but by the time she introduced Dicte Svendsen to readers in 2002, it was clear she had tapped into something both familiar and disruptive. Her background in journalism gave her work structure, but it’s her ability to dig into social tensions, moral ambiguity, and private contradiction that has kept her readers hooked across books, languages, and formats.

Read More »
Jakob Ejersbo The Danish Author Who Wrote Africa Like He Lived It

Jakob Ejersbo: The Danish Author Who Wrote Africa Like He Lived It

Jakob Ejersbo wrote like someone who had seen too much to lie. His novels stripped away sentiment and turned a clear eye on addiction, displacement, class, and the uneasy spaces where cultures meet but don’t connect. He didn’t have a long career. He didn’t need one. The work speaks for itself, and it still holds.

Read More »
Danish Politician Campaigns on Tinder to Reach Voters

Get the daily top News Stories from Denmark in your inbox