Vendela Vida (born September 6, 1971)[1] is an American novelist, journalist, editor, screenplay writer, and educator. She is the author of multiple books, has worked as a writing teacher, and is a founder and editor of The Believer magazine.[2]
Early life
Vida was born on September 6, 1971, in San Francisco, California.[3] Both of her parents were European immigrants, her mother was from Sweden and her father is Hungarian.[4][5] She inherited the name Vendela from her maternal grandmother.[4]
She left California to attend Middlebury College in Vermont where she received her bachelor's degree in English in 1993. It was at Middlebury where a mutual friend introduced her to her future spouse, Dave Eggers.[6] She later continued her studies and received a Master of Fine Arts degree at Columbia University.[4][7] After graduating, she interned at the Paris Review, and she adapted her master's degree thesis into her first book, Girls on the Verge.[4][8]
Career
In 2003, Vida co-founded The Believer magazine with Dave Eggers and works as an editor with her friends from grad school Heidi Julavits and Ed Park.[9]The Believer happens to be located next door to McSweeney's.[4]
In 2017, Vida was a Lurie Author-in-Residence and instructor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at San Jose State University.[12][13]
Books
Published in 2003, And Now You Can Go is a novel set in New York City, San Francisco, and the Philippines, tracing the impulsive journeys of a young woman in the wake of an assault.[14] In a 2003 Guardian article Vida voiced her plan to author a trilogy of novels "on the subject of violence and rage."[15]
The second novel, Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name (2007, HarperCollins), is a thriller that takes place in the Sápmi region.[16] As a 2013 fellow at the Sundance Labs, Vida alongside Eva Weber developed Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name into a script, which received the Sundance Institute Mahindra Global Filmmaking Award.[17]
The Lovers (June 2010, Ecco), author Joyce Carol Oates called it "a riveting and suspenseful novel about an American woman’s voyage to self-discovery.”[citation needed]The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty (2015, Ecco/HarperCollins), was inspired by a trip Vida took to Morocco where her bag was stolen.[18]
Two of Vida’s novels have been New York Times notable books of the year, and she is the winner of the 2007 Kate Chopin Award, given to a writer whose female protagonist chooses an unconventional path.[19][13]
Personal life
She is married to author Dave Eggers, has two children, and lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.[10][20][21] Vida and Eggers had met in 1998 in San Francisco at a wedding and started dating in 1999.[4]
Works
Vida, Vendela (2000), Girls on the Verge: Debutante Dips, Drive-Bys, and Other Initiations (revised ed.), St. Martin's Press, ISBN978-0-312-26328-7
Vida, Vendela (2003), And Now You Can Go (reprint ed.), Paw Prints, ISBN978-1-4395-7338-9
^ abcdefgCrown, Sarah (2011-07-08). "A life in writing: Vendela Vida". The Guardian. ISSN0261-3077. Retrieved 2021-12-17. Girls on the Verge, which spun out of Vida's Columbia MFA thesis, is an intriguing exploration of female coming-of-age rituals in America, written when Vida was in her early 20s, only just emerging from the hinterland of fake IDs and underage drinking herself.
^Baker, Aylie (April 10, 2007). "Just a couple of staggering geniuses". The Middlebury Campus. Retrieved 2019-04-30. Eggers met his wife Vendela Vida '93 through a mutual friend who also attended the College. Vida, an English major graduating Phi Beta Kappa, dabbled in several disciplines, including theatre and Italian.
^Walker, Tiana. "Vendela Vida, SJSU's Lurie Author-in-Residence". SJSU News. Retrieved 2019-04-30. She began as a tutor during her undergraduate years at Middlebury College in Vermont, as well as during her time in graduate school at Columbia University.