Deb Olin Unferth
She grew up in Chicago. She has an MFA from Syracuse University, where she studied with George Saunders, Tobias Wolff, and Michael Martone.
She became a vegan in 2008. In 2020 she published the novel ''Barn 8'', which is about the personhood of chickens and industrial egg farming. For the book, she did extensive research, which appears in a longform article in ''Harper's'' ''Magazine''. ''The New York Times'' called ''Barn 8'', "a beautiful, urgent, politically charged book."
In 1987, as a freshman in college studying liberation theology, she dropped out of school and traveled through Central America interviewing and writing about key political and religious figures involved in the civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador, the Sandinista revolutionary government in Nicaragua, and the Noriega dictatorship in Panama. These travels formed the basis of her memoir ''Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the War'', published by Holt in 2011, which was a finalist for a 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award.
Her first book of stories, ''Minor Robberies'', appeared in a box with two other books of stories, by Dave Eggers and Sarah Manguso. The box of books was published by McSweeney's.
Her first novel, ''Vacation'', was also published by McSweeney's, in 2007.
She is married to the philosophy professor Matt Evans, who specializes in ancient Greek philosophy. Provided by Wikipedia