- Lawrence Hill
:"For the suburb of Bracknell in the UK, see
Lawrence Hill, Bracknell Forest , for the inner city area of Bristol, UK seeLawrence Hill, Bristol ".Lawrence Hill is a Canadian writer, whose memoir "Black Berry, Sweet Juice: On Being Black and White in Canada", was a Canadian bestseller in 2001.He is the author of the acclaimed novel "The Book of Negroes", which was published in January 2007. It takes its name from a historical document "The Book of Negroes", in which details of the
Black Loyalists and enslaved Africans belonging to members of theBritish Army were evacuated fromNew York in 1783 A Canadian bestseller, it was longlisted for theGiller Prize and won the 2007Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize as well as the 2008Commonwealth Writers' Prize . The book was published in the US under the title "Someone Knows My Name".In 2007, Hill collaborated with former US-Army Soldier (now deserter) Joshua Key to write Key's account of the Iraq War. His book "The Deserter's Tale, the story of an ordinary soldier who walked away from the war in Iraq" is the result of their interviews and meetings.
Winner of the 2005 National Magazine Award for best essay for his work entitled, "Is Africa's Pain Black America's Burden?" (published in The Walrus magazine), Hill is the author of the novel "Any Known Blood", about a young man's search for his roots, and also wrote the non-fiction "Women of Vision", a history of the Canadian Negro Women's Association. His first novel, "Some Great Thing", was published in 1992.
Additionally, Hill wrote the screenplay for "Seeking Salvation," a documentary about the Black Church in Canada. "Seeking Salvation" won the American Wilbur Award for best national television documentary in 2005.
Hill grew up in the
Don Mills neighbourhood ofToronto and currently lives in Burlington with his wife and five children. He is the son of social scientist and public servantDaniel G. Hill and social activist Donna Hill, and is the brother of singer-songwriterDan Hill .External links
* [http://www.wier.ca/lhill.html Lawrence Hill at Writers in Electronic Residence]
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