Her 2010 novel Домогт Ану хатан (The Legendary Queen Anu) was named National Book of the Year for Mongolian Literature.
[2] In 2012 she wrote the screenplay for, produced, and directed the film version of Домогт Ану хатан, released internationally as “Warrior Princess”.
She graduated in 1995 with a master's degree in journalism and worked as a journalist covering the Law and Crime beat at the state-owned newspaper Ардын эрх (People's Right).
She was spokesperson for Mongolia's Democratic Party government under Prime Minister Mendsaikhan Enkhsaikhan in 1997, but then joined the "Anons” journalism center as its director a year later in 1998.
From 1999 to 2000 she was the executive director of the Mongolian Union of Journalists and in 2001 she became editor of the Алтан шар сонин (Golden Orange Newspaper).
Several popular novels followed, including; Шүрэн бугуйвч (Coral Bracelet), Э-майлаар илгээсэн захиа сарнай (Rose Sent by Email), Үйсэн дээрх бичээс (Script Carved on Wood), Чимээгүй хашгираан (Silent Scream), Цасан нулимс (Snow Tears), Зургадугаар сарын цас (June Snow), Сэтгэлийн анир (Spiritual Peace), and Novels.
Her early works dealt mainly with themes of Mongolian national and cultural identity and the struggles of young adults living in modern-day Mongolia.
In 2009, she and her daughter Amina translated The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank (Анне Франкийн өдрийн тэмдэглэл) into Mongolian.
[7] In 2015 she returned to historical fiction with Үүлэн хээтэй орчлон (Cloud-Shaped World) which weaved themes of Buddhism and karma against the backdrop of Mongolia's early 20th century struggle for independence.
On May 3, 2008 she delivered a presentation on "Renaissance of Feminism in Mongolia," at a lecture series sponsored by Amnesty International at the Mongolian State University.