Olga Urashova
 Engravings Torn from Insomnia by Olga Orozco, Although Olga Orozco has won almost every major literary award from her native Argentina and her work has been translated into 15 languages, no single volume of her poetry exists in English-until now. Award-winning translator/Colorado Poet Laureate Mary Crow has chosen the finest of Orozco's poems for this long-awaited Spanish-English bilingual collection, "Engravings Torn from Insomnia." Olga Orozco is the author of 20 books of poetry. Her work makes use of surrealist techniques as well as the vatic voice of primitive poetry. She died in 1999. Mary Crow has published several award-winning translations. She teaches at Colorado State University and is the Poet Laureate of Colorado. Crow is the author of "Borders "and "I Have Tasted the Apple.
 Olga: Revolutionary and Martyr This biography profiles Olga Benrio Prestes, part German and Jewish, who became one of the most prolific Communist activists in the 1930s until her death in a Nazi concentration camp at the age of 26. This book is reissued to coincide with a new film on Olga's life, produced in Brazil.
Olga da Polga - Olga da Polga is a fictional character and heroine of Michael Bond's The Tales of Olga da Polga (ISBN 0192751301) series. Unlike his more famous character Paddington Bear, Olga (a guinea pig) is a teller of tall tales in the style of Baron Munchhausen. Olga of Kiev - Olga (), also called Olga Prekrasa, or Olga the Beauty, Old Norse: Helga) (died July 11, 969 in Kiev) was a Pskov woman of Varangian extraction who married the future Igor of Kiev, arguably in 903. Queen Olga of Württemberg - Olga (11 September, 1822 - 30 October, 1892) was born Grand Duchess Olga Nikolayevna of Russia. She was a daughter of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia. Olga Kosakiewicz - Olga Kosakiewicz was a student of Simone de Beauvoir who formed a romantic relationship with both Simone and Jean-Paul Sartre in the Autumn of 1935 when she was only 18. The affair is immortalized in de Beauvoir's first novel L'Invitée (She Came to Stay, 1943, Gallimard), which was dedicated to Olga (where her name appears as Kosakievicz in the Norton translation).
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