Fred Hills was born on 26 November 1934 to Frederic Wheeler Hills, an engineer, and his homemaker wife, Mildred Chambers (Hood) Hills, in the city of
East Orange in
Essex County, New Jersey. His higher education was at
Columbia College where he had the opportunity to study under noted literary critics such as
Mark Van Doren and
Lionel Trilling and after earning a bachelor's degree in English in 1956, he continued his studies at
Stanford University to secure a master's degree in English in 1958. Subsequently, he joined the
United States Army at their
Fort Ord post. Later, he worked as a salesperson at the San Francisco Emporium book store before moving to literary career by joining
McGraw Hill and started work at their college text books division, eventually becoming the editor in chief of the division. Soon, he was appointed as the editor in chief of the trade books division and it was here he got the opportunity to work with
Vladimir Nabokov, which proved to be a turning point in his career. The association with Nabokov continued until the writer's death in 1977, before which the writer completed his last novel,
Look at the Harlequins!, in 1974. Leaving
McGraw Hill in 1979, Hills joined
Simon & Schuster as a member of the editorial board and the job provided him with the opportunity to work with several noted personalities such as
M. Scott Peck,
William Saroyan,
Ann Rule,
Jane Fonda and
Arianna Huffington. He was also associated with
Raymond Carver,
James MacGregor Burns,
Phil Donahue, and
David Halberstam, among others. and some of the titles he was involved with are
Pulitzer winning
The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power by
Daniel Yergin,
Madonna Unauthorized by
Christopher Andersen and
The Stranger Beside Me by
Ann Rule. Fred Hills, whose first marriage had ended in a divorce, married Kathleen Matthews, a noted writer who had worked for him at
McGraw Hill, in 1980 and the couple had two sons, Gregory and Frederic. He died on 7 November 2020 at his home in
Bronxville, New York, at the age of 85, survived by his wife, children including two children from his first marriage, Bradford and Christina, Stuart Hills, his brother and his granddaughter. == See also ==