Monday, 16 September 2024 09:17

'A deep, poetic beauty': Review of 'This Albion: Snapshots of a Compromised Land' by Charlie Hill

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'A deep, poetic beauty': Review of 'This Albion: Snapshots of a Compromised Land' by Charlie Hill

Bobby Seal from the Psychogeographic Review reviews This Albion: Snapshots of a Compromised Land by Charlie Hill

I had for some time believed the key to effective writing was to concentrate on the surface of things. Record them faithfully, and they’d do the work for you. After all, the world is manifestly absurd and provides you with everything you need in the way of character and environment and plot; why complicate – or simplify – things with undue authorial mediation?

Recently, however, I had started to question the value of such an approach. . .

Charlie Hill’s slim paperback more than makes up for its lack of length and detail with the depth and perceptivity of his observations as he charts a series of walks he has made through locations in England, Scotland and Wales. The book’s format is simple: each short essay focuses on a particular place Hill has visited in recent years, some urban and some and others rural, and crafts a collecion of meditations on what he sees, hears, thinks and feels.

img src="https://psychogeographicreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/contents-774x1024.jpg" sizes="(max-width: 438px) 100vw, 438px" srcset="https://psychogeographicreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/contents-774x1024.jpg 774w, /  

Mercifully, there is nothing self-consciously clever or showy about Hill’s prose, though his resume suggests he is more than capable of writing in this way if he chose to. Instead, he tells his story, his series of stories, simply and clearly. However, the overall achievement of these separate pieces, when considered as a whole, is to present us with something much more profound. Hill’s snapshots show a nation in flux, its people split by division. He feels the weight of history resting heavily on today and senses anxiety about the future underlying much of Britain’s public discourse.

But there is hope aplenty. Like some latter-day pilgrim Hill sketches a starburst of destinations radiating out from his home in Birmingham, England’s phrenic centre.  He is everyman and everywoman, he is you and me, and he guides us on his walks with humour and good sense and, despite the despair he notes in some quarters, he also meets kindness, acceptance and positivity wherever he goes. Though simple and staightforward on the surface, Hill’s writing conjures up a deep poetic beauty.

This Albion: Snapshots of a Compromised Land, by Charlie Hill, ISBN 9781912710744, is available here

Read 727 times Last modified on Monday, 16 September 2024 09:38