Ana Šomlo (Serbian: Ана Шомло; 27 March 1935 – 9 July 2024) was a Serbian-Israeli writer and journalist who wrote short prose and novels.
Due to the anti-Semitic measures of the German authorities, she fled with her father and sister to Malajnica, and then to the Homolje mountains, where they hid until the end of the Second World War.
During her stay in Israel, Šomlo began writing political news articles and after returning to Belgrade, she was employed by the magazine Duga.
In the "Croatian General Lexicon" (Miroslav Krleža Lexicographic Institute, 1996) she wrote about contemporary Israeli writers.
For her collection of stories Поново у Јерусалиму ("Back in Jerusalem"), she received an award from the Israeli Ministry of Immigration in 1996.
Perhaps the most interesting literary achievement of Šomlo is her book Миленина писма Кафки ("Milena's Letters to Kafka"), which was published in 1988.