Her 2014 debut novel, Homo Sapienne, was written in Greenlandic, as well as in a Danish translation by the author, with both published by Milik in 2014.
Naasuliardarpi (2020) was her follow-up a few years later, and earned her the prestigious Nordic Council Literature Prize.
[3] Her 2014 debut novel Homo Sapienne focuses on the lives of five young adults in Nuuk.
[4] It was noted for both its use of modern storytelling techniques and for its portrayal of LGBTQ+ people in Greenlandic society.
[7] In 2020, she published Naasuliardarpi in Greenlandic and a Danish translation, Blomsterdalen, (Flower Valley), which won the Nordic Council Literature Prize in 2021.