Lawrence Hill
 

About
the Author

 
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Writing

Hill is the author of eleven books of fiction and non-fiction, including his most recent novel, Beatrice and Croc Harry (HarperCollins Canada, 2022). He has won numerous awards such as the National Magazine Award, the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, as well as Canada Reads twice. His first two novels were Some Great Thing and Any Known Blood, and his first non-fiction work to attract national attention was the memoir Black Berry, Sweet Juice: On Being Black and White in CanadaBut it was his third novel, The Book of Negroes (HarperCollins Canada, 2007) — published in some countries as Someone Knows My Name and in French as Aminata — that attracted widespread attention in Canada and other countries. 

Lawrence Hill’s non-fiction book, Blood: The Stuff of Life was published in 2013 by House of Anansi Press. Hill drew from the book to deliver the 2013 Massey Lectures across Canada. 

In 2013, Hill published the essay Dear Sir, I Intend to Burn Your Book: An Anatomy of a Book Burning (University of Alberta Press).

His fourth novel, The Illegal, was published by HarperCollins Canada in 2015 and by WW Norton in the USA in 2016. 

Hill wrote a feature essay for The Globe and Mail about the life and the medically assisted death of his mother Donna Mae Hill, as well as the one-act play Sensitivity for Obsidian Theatre in Toronto.

Hill is a professor of creative writing at the University of Guelph, in Ontario. He helped create the annual common reading program "Gryphons Read" featuring BIPOC and queer writers at the University of Guelph. Recently, in concert with Walls to Bridges, he taught a third-year undergraduate memoir writing course in the Grand Valley Institution for Women, a federal penitentiary in Kitchener, Ontario.

He is currently working on a novel about the African American soldiers who travelled to northern British Columbia and Yukon during World War II to help build The Alaska Highway. A member of the Order of Canada and recipient of ten honorary doctorates from Canadian universities, Hill lives with his family in Ontario and Newfoundland.

Personal

Lawrence Hill is the son of American immigrants — a Black father and a white mother — who came to Canada the day after they married in 1953 in Washington, D.C. On his father’s side, Hill’s grandfather and great grandfather were ministers of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. His mother came from a Republican family in Oak Park, Illinois, graduated from Oberlin College and went on to become a civil rights activist in D.C. Growing up in the predominantly white suburb of Don Mills, Ontario in the sixties, Hill was greatly influenced by his parents’ work in the human rights movement. Much of Hill’s writing touches on issues of identity and belonging.

Hill’s first passion was running, and as a boy he dreamed of winning an Olympic gold medal in the 5,000 meters. But despite years of intense training and thousands of kilometers, he never managed to run quite fast enough. As a teenager, he consoled himself by deciding to become a writer instead, and at 14 he wrote his first story on his mother’s L.C. Smith typewriter. It was a bad story, and a good beginning.

Formerly a reporter with The Globe and Mail and parliamentary correspondent for The Winnipeg Free Press, Hill speaks fluent French and some Spanish. He has lived and worked across Canada, in Baltimore, and in Spain and France. He is an honorary patron of Crossroads International, for which he travelled as a volunteer to the West African countries Niger, Cameroon and Mali, and to which he lends the name of his best-known character for the Aminata Fund, which supports programs for girls and women in Africa.

Hill sits on the advisory committee of the Centre for Community—Engaged Narrative Arts in Hamilton, Ontario. His earlier volunteer work has included serving The Black Loyalist Heritage Society, Book Clubs for Inmates, Project Bookmark Canada, The Ontario Black History Society and the Writers’ Union of Canada. He has a B.A. in economics from Laval University in Quebec City and an M.A. in writing from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. 

Hill lives with his family in Hamilton, Ontario and in Woody Point, Newfoundland.

Awards

 

The Book of Negroes won several awards, including The Rogers/Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, both CBC Radio’s Canada Reads and Radio Canada’s Le Combat des livres, and The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, which came with a private audience with Queen Elizabeth II. The Book of Negroes television miniseries, which Lawrence Hill co-wrote with director Clement Virgo, attracted millions of viewers CBC in Canada and on BET in the United States in 2015, and won many awards, including eleven Canadian Screen Awards and the NAACP award for best writing of a television motion picture.

Blood: The Stuff of Life won the Hamilton Literary Award for non-fiction. 

Defended by Olympic gold medallist and philanthropist Clara Hughes, The Illegal won Canada Reads 2016, making Hill the first writer to win the prize twice.

Hill has received nine honorary doctorates from Canadian universities, as well as the Governor General’s History Award. He has been named a Library and Archives Canada Scholar, been appointed to the Order of Canada and inducted into Canada’s Walk of Fame.