Program Info:Return

(Brent Holland)

Lawrence Hill -Book Of Negros

Afr_Cdns in Nova Scotia 1700s / Lawrence's wrting tips for students & listners

Series:

1_Brent Holland Show Series Detail List All Series

  » # Episodes: 94
  » Most Recent: 28 Feb, 2011
  » Website: http://www.brenthollandshow.com/
Length: 0:30:00
Uploaded: 3 Aug, 2010

Recording Date: 4 Aug, 2010
Recording Location: CKLU Sudbury Canada
Logsheet: none
Language: English
Topical for: Timeless
Status: Complete, Ready to Air
Copyright: (C) Brent Holland

Program Title: Lawrence Hill -Book Of Negros
Description: 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 university-educated, ordained 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. The story of how they met, married, left the United States and raised a family in Toronto is described in Hill's bestselling memoir Black Berry, Sweet Juice: On Being Black and White in Canada (HarperCollins Canada, 2001). 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.

Lawrence Hill's third novel was published as The Book of Negroes in Canada, Great Britain, South Africa and Ja­maica and as Someone Knows My Name in the USA, Australia and New Zealand. It won the overall Common­wealth Writers’ Prize for Best Book, the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, the Ontario Library Association’s Ever­green Award and CBC Radio’s Canada Reads. The book was a finalist for the Hurston/Wright LEGACY Award and longlisted for both the Giller Prize and the IMPAC Award.

Hill is also the author of the novels Any Known Blood (William Morrow, New York, 1999 and HarperCollins Canada, 1997) and Some Great Thing (HarperCollins 2009, originally published by Turnstone Press, Winnipeg, 1992).

Hill's most recent non-fiction book The Deserter's Tale: the Story of an Ordinary Soldier Who Walked Away from the War in Iraq (written with Joshua Key) was released in the United States, Canada, Australia, Japan and several European countries.

Hill won the National Magazine Award for the best essay published in Canada in 2005 for "Is Africa's Pain Black America's Burden?" (The Walrus, February 2005). In 2005, the 90-minute film document that Hill wrote, Seeking Salvation: A History of the Black Church in Canada, Travesty Productions, Toronto (2004), won the American Wilbur Award for best national television documentary.

Formerly a reporter with The Globe and Mail and parliamentary correspondent for The Winnipeg Free Press, Hill also speaks French and Spanish. He has lived and worked across Canada, in Baltimore, and in Spain and France. As a volunteer with Canadian Crossroads International, he has traveled to the West African countries Niger, Cam­eroon and Mali. 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 now lives, writes and runs in Hamilton, Ontario.

Host(s): Brent Holland
Featured Speakers/Guests: Lawrence Hill

Credits: All shows can be downloaded free of charge, do let us know when and where you broadcast the show.
brenthollandshow@gmail.com

Comments: For more Arhived shows and free downloads:
http://www.brenthollandshow.com/


Topic:
Type: Weekly Program

File Information
Listen
(h:mm:ss) 0:30:00
2010_08_04_LawrenceHill_BookOfNegros_SHOWMASTEREDmp3 Download (1)
2010_08_04_LawrenceHill_BookOfNegros_SHOWMASTEREDmp3.mp3 28,787k
128kbps Stereo
Listen All