![]() ![]() When it was done, in January 2013, Benderspink helped set her up with a literary agent at New Leaf and by April she had the book and movie deal. So after graduation, she moved home to East Longmeadow, Mass., and spent the next year writing the novel. "I was always fascinated by the X-Men and the story of mutants being oppressed, but 100 years in the future mutants will run the show."Īt a pitch meeting for USC students at Benderspink, producers encouraged Aveyard to develop her idea, especially as a book. "I realized that everything good was taken and even everything bad as well." She decided to try her hand at writing.Ī total film geek who names the Lord of the Rings trilogy, Jurassic Park (she saw it when she was 3 years old), Star Wars, and Independence Day ("the perfect summer blockbuster") as favorites, she says the inspiration for the book came from X-Men. Īveyard recounted that she was interning at a studio, tasked with looking at self-published books on Amazon to see if there was anything to option. Victoria Aveyard was raised in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts before moving to Los Angeles to earn a BFA in screenwriting at the University of Southern. The film rights were optioned by Universal Pictures. ![]() She scored a three-book deal for the Red Queen trilogy. ![]() Aveyard graduated from USC's screenwriting program in 2012. ![]()
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