Hill's first passion was running, but he was unable to realize his dreams of becoming an elite athlete and winning an Olympic gold medal in the 5,000 meters. He became the parliamentary bureau chief for the newspaper in Ottawa, covering Parliament, the
Supreme Court of Canada and a wide range of cultural, economic and social issues.
Trent University, the
Calgary Public Library, The City of
Rothesay (NB), the Hamilton Public Library and the One Book One Community program linking Kitchener, Waterloo and Cambridge, Ontario.
The Book of Negroes was adapted as a
six-part television miniseries. Hill co-wrote it with director
Clement Virgo. The series featured actors
Aunjanue Ellis,
Cuba Gooding, Jr., and
Louis Gossett Jr. Filmed in
South Africa,
Nova Scotia, and Ontario in early 2014, the miniseries premiered in
Cannes,
Toronto and
New York City in the fall of 2014, began to air on
CBC Television in Canada in January 2015, and was scheduled to air on
BET in the US in February 2015. Although Hill's novel
The Book of Negroes was first released in 2007 by
W. W. Norton & Company under the title
Someone Knows My Name; the American publisher re-issued a new edition of the novel with the original title in January 2015 to build on the mini-series. BET has committed to releasing the TV miniseries in the US as
The Book of Negroes.
HarperCollins Australia published this novel as
Someone Knows My Name in Australia and New Zealand. Hill's short fiction has been featured in the literary quarterlies
Descant and
Exile, as well as in Canadian newspapers and magazines such as
The Toronto Star and
Toronto Life. and a short story entitled "Meet You at the Door". Its January–February 2015 issue featured Hill's essay on the creative process of adapting
The Book of Negroes for the TV mini-series. Hill served as a writer in residence with the
Toronto District School Board from 2011 to 2013, visiting some twenty schools to discuss the art and business of writing with students. Hill was selected in 2013 as CBC Massey Lecturer. In the fall of that year he delivered lectures in five Canadian cities, drawn from his non-fiction book
Blood: the Stuff of Life (2013). Also aired on
CBC Radio,
Blood: The Stuff of Life is a personal consideration of the physical, social, cultural and psychological aspects of blood, how it defines, unites and divides us. In 2015,
Blood: The Stuff of Life won the Hamilton Literary Award for Non Fiction. He was named a
Member of the Order of Canada in 2015. His newest novel,
The Illegal, was published in fall 2015. The novel has already been optioned for film treatment by
Conquering Lion Pictures, the producers of the
Book of Negroes miniseries.
The Illegal won the 2016 edition of
Canada Reads, making Hill the first writer ever to win the competition twice. ==Translations==