Journalism Boyd first worked as a copy editor for the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution starting in 1985. She later became a reporter, book critic and line editor for the paper. Boyd founded
EightRock, a cutting-edge journal of black arts and culture, in 1990. Two years later, she co-founded
HealthQuest, the first nationally distributed magazine focusing on African-American health, and served as its editor in chief. Boyd eventually became Arts Editor of the
Journal-Constitution, a position she held until leaving the newspaper in 2004. Published in 2003, Boyd's
Wrapped in Rainbows was the first biography of author and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston in 25 years. Boyd said she felt a strong connection to the author since first reading Hurston's novel,
Their Eyes Were Watching God, during her freshman year at Northwestern University. She describes her experience as feeling called to the challenge of writing
Wrapped in Rainbows when she heard Hurston's first biographer,
Robert Hemenway, a white male, speak at the 1994 Zora Neale Hurston Festival of the Arts and Humanities in
Eatonville, Florida. Hemenway suggested it was time for a new biography and this time it needed to be written by a black woman.
The Washington Post declared
Wrapped in Rainbows "the definitive Hurston biography for many years to come."
Pulitzer Prize-winning author
Alice Walker has said of Boyd's work, "This daughter, Valerie Boyd, has written a biography of Zora Neale Hurston that will be the standard for years to come. Offering vivid splashes of Zora's colorful humor, daring individualism and refreshing insouciance, Boyd has done justice to a dauntless spirit and heroic life."
Academia After leaving the
Journal-Constitution in 2004, Boyd went into academia. She was named
Charlayne Hunter-Gault Distinguished Writer-in-Residence at
Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication three years later. She co-founded the Alice Walker Literary Society in 1997, together with
Beverly Guy-Sheftall and
Rudolph Byrd. She was also an elected board member for the
National Book Critics Circle. Boyd traveled the United States giving speeches and lectures on the life and legacy of Zora Neale Hurston as a part of the Big Read, a program sponsored by the
National Endowment for the Arts designed to re-establish reading for pleasure as a popular American pastime. ==Later life==