Hamilton was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and his family moved to Nottinghamshire when he was four. Hamilton won the first William Hill Sports Book Award with the 2007 memoir Provided You Don't Kiss Me: 20 Years With Brian Clough., an account of his time at the Nottingham Evening Post where he worked for more than 20 years. The book also won the 'Best Football Book' category of the 2008 British Sports Book Awards. He was the paper's Nottingham Forest reporter during the club's glory years and covered both of Forest's historic victorious European Cup campaigns for the newspaper. During his time covering Forest, Hamilton developed a close, if at times testy, relationship with the club's famously outspoken manager, Brian Clough. In Provided You Don't Kiss Me, Hamilton claims he bonded with Clough after the manager learned he, like Clough, was from the north-east of England. He provides an eyewitness account of the relationship between Clough and his assistant, Peter Taylor, and charts Clough's demise and descent into alcoholism. FHM called the book a "superb portrait of the conflicted, contradictory man doesn't duck his uglier aspects." It quickly became a bestseller and won the William Hill award against very strong competition. After winning the £18,000 first prize, Hamilton wrote a column for the Yorkshire Post, where he was a deputy editor, expressing his surprise and delight at the book's success. In 2009, Hamilton won a second William Hill Sports Book of the Year award for his work on cricketer Harold Larwood; a biography of the outstanding fast bowler Harold Larwood, who was a protagonist in the controversial 'Bodyline' series between Australia and England in 1932-33. The book also won the 'Best Biography' category of the 2010 British Sports Book Awards and was named the Wisden Book of the Year. In 2019 he won his third William Hill award for The Great Romantic: Cricket and the Golden Age of Neville Cardus. After 32 years as a newspaper journalist in Nottingham and Leeds, Hamilton now writes freelance, working mostly on his books. He and his wife Mandy live in the village of Menston in West Yorkshire.
Books
Nottingham Forest FC: Thirty Great Years in Photographs, 1988
Provided You Don't Kiss Me: 20 Years with Brian Clough, 2007
Sweet Summers: The Classic Cricket Writing of JM Kilburn, 2008
Fire and Ashes, 2009
Harold Larwood, 2009
Old Big 'ead: The Wit and Wisdom of Brian Clough, 2009
A Last English Summer, 2010
The Unreliable Life of Harry the Valet: The Great Victorian Jewel Thief, 2011