Is set to publish her novel, "THE CHEESEMAKER’S DAUGHTER," on August 6, 2024, through Regalo Press. The novel weaves the story of a 34-year-old Yugoslav refugee and New Yorker who returns to her Croatian island to revive her father's failing cheese factory, facing her tumultuous past and a troubled marriage. Vuković's contributions to writing about Croatia have been recognized with accolades such as the “40 Under 40” honor by The National Federation of Croatian Americans Cultural Foundation in 2016.
She also received the Zlatna Penkala award in 2017, and a first-place award from the Society of American Travel Writers in 2019. She holds a degree in Literature and Writing and an MFA in Nonfiction Writing from Columbia University, where she served as Editor-in-Chief of Columbia: A Journal of Literature and Art. Vuković, residing in Manhattan with her family, is a member of several prestigious writing and journalistic societies and has participated in various international literary programs.
—and away from her evaporating marriage—to help him save his failing cheese factory, she must face her rocky past and an uncertain future. How do you begin again when the past threatens to drown you? In the throes of an unraveling marriage, New Yorker Marina Maržić returns to her native Croatian island where she helps her father with his struggling cheese factory, Sirana. Forced to confront her divided Croatian-American identity and her past as a refugee from the former Yugoslavia, Marina moves in with her parents on Pag and starts a new life working at Sirana. As she gradually settles back into a place that was once home, her life becomes inextricably intertwined with their island’s cheese. When her past with the son of a rival cheesemaker stokes further unrest on their divided island, she must find a way to save Sirana—and in the process, learn to belong on her own terms. Exploring underlying cultural and ethnic tensions in a complex region mired in centuries of war and turmoil, The Cheesemaker’s Daughter takes us through the year before Croatia joins the European Union. On the dramatic moonscape island of Pag, we are transported to strikingly barren vistas, medieval towns, and the mesmerizing Adriatic Sea, providing a rare window into a tight-knit community with strong family ties in a corner of the world where divisions are both real and imagined. Asking questions central to identity and the meaning of home, this richly drawn story reckons with how we survive inherited and personal traumas, and what it means to heal and reinvent oneself in the face of life’s challenges.