Vall de la Ville was born in Caracas and grew up in a family of writers and filmmakers. When she was six her family moved to Florence, Italy. There she completed the
seconda e terza elementare, before moving back to Venezuela. While pursuing her BA in anthropology at the
Universidad Central de Venezuela she won a silver medal at the Rock Climbing Panamerican Championship (Copa Alpina, Bogotá 1996) and was one of the three climbers of the first all-female attempt to
Tepui Roraima (1998), one of the ancient geological formations of the Guyana Shield (border between Venezuela, Colombia and Brazil). After a tropical rain that changed the physical conditions of the wall, the team realized they couldn't finish the ascent. Weather and exhaustion prevented them from a second attempt. She has also climbed in the US, South of France, Thailand, Colombia and Peru. In 2003 Vall de la Ville completed an MA in political science at Caracas’ Universidad Simon Bolivar. Her thesis involved a research study on the political values and practices of Chaguaramas de Loero, a small community in the northeast Venezuelan coast. In 2006 her first short story book
Ana no duerme was finalist in the Concurso Nacional de Autores Inéditos
Monte Ávila Editores. She moved to New York in 2011 to pursue her writing career. While there she completed an MFA in creative writing at NYU. After finishing the award-winning novel
Los días animales,
her first poetry book
Viaje legado, and her short story book
Ana no duerme y otros cuentos, she pursued an MA in Hispanic cultural studies in Columbia University. Her second short story collection,
Enero es el mes más largo; la antología poética bilingüe,
Entre el aliento y el precipicio: poéticas sobre la belleza / Between the Breath and the Abyss: Poetics on Beauty; así como
The Animal Days,
will be published in 2021. == Cultural activism ==