‘Charlie Hill's This Albion is a remarkable socio-cultural examination of Britain today. Hill writes with a beautiful prose style that is sharp, poetic, funny, tragic and full of life.' Aaron Kent
'Charlie Hill is a modern day walker-writer. This is a collection of thought-provoking, often joyous, always fascinating observations that blaze with insight about the dynamic link between people and place.' Kerry Hadley-Pryce
‘I'm yet to meet a Charlie Hill book I don't like. A true writers' writer. This Albion is no exception, as he takes us on a beautiful, hilarious, dark and awe-inspiring peregrination through the off-kilter and unusual landscapes of the UK. Graveyards give way to abandoned warehouses that lead us to bookshops and canal tow paths, punctuated occasionally with a glimpse and echo of sublime and uncanny birds. Hill notices things others don't - he's a poet in that sense, and draws us closer to what is most beautiful and what is most bleak in the everyday moments and everyday things that are always present, but so often seem insignificant. These travelogue vignettes give us a taste of this idiosyncratic world but build into each taste a stratigraphic studying of place-identity - the way places shape us and how we affect them.’ Rob Francis
'Hill renders the ordinary extraordinary in meticulously observed stories that are wry, insightful, and beautifully written.' Carys Bray
'Charlie Hill turns the conventional short story on its head. Taking situations with which we’re all familiar yet soaring above the well-trod lowlands of plot and character, these exceptional stories explore in lucid prose the ways in which the modern urban world impacts on our collective psyche.' Elizabeth Baines
'Moments of realisation and consciousness of what it is to be human, and what a fragile thing that is, and real existential dread about what that means, all while waiting for the bus or standing outside Lidl. The success of these stories lies in that evocation of what it is to exist in a certain place and time and the inter-play between the drama of these inner lives and being in the world of everyday cracked pavements and the traffic of South Birmingham. Stories in the Tindal Street tradition of Birmingham writing, along with traces of James Kelman's Not not while the giro and Greyhound for Breakfast.' Anthony Cartwright
'The title gives a nod to Bukowski and in the first story 'a walk by the river' there's echoes of early Carver in the underlying sense of menace. Not a fan of second person narration, I finally realized how it can work and why it so often doesn't - the writer has to write with complete authority to carry if off and Hill does that here with aplomb. In 'the man who walked backwards' we have a delicate prose poem on mortality. In 'Stuff' we have what reads like a Brummie Kelman, chronicling the humdrum of existence in order that we might know it better, moment to moment. A poet of suburbia, Hill's sharply observed and sometimes sharply observing characters are so deeply immersed in place that we can't help but listen carefully for what they are telling us while also enjoying their sly humour along the way. There's a beautiful economy at times too, like this note-perfect summation of an office: I worked in an office. The office had ceiling tiles on the ceiling and carpet tiles on the floor. In a better world, everyone would be reading this kind of stuff, rather than the saccharine shite that fills the bestseller lists and gets whispered about in hushed tones on TV. Give me Charlie Hill any day of the week, but especially on a Monday' Neil Campbell
'You know what the life of the mind is made of? Of course you do, but you can't say. Charlie Hill can though. Bits of it anyway. The Devil. The Details. Paranoia, Garden Centres, Obsession, Baby wipes, Baby Octopuses. Street names in the brain, brilliant prose poem narratives that purple up what's happening with the endless compression and head sweats we all of us suffer. Poetry can do things no other medium can, and here we have a collection doing that - attempting to mark the ineffable with the formally brilliant and textually rich. "vile confusion and obscene clarity", that's what good poetry is, both of them together.' SJ Fowler
'Charlie Hill’s excellent The State of Us is a clear-eyed, comic, occasionally angry but deeply humane flick through climate collapse, war, political instability, armageddon, competitive parents and warring foodies. He never lets his ire overwhelm his empathy, though, and has an auteur’s eye for a perfectly-timed hard cut. It’s funny but it’s not funny, and in that uncomfortable space Hill captures something essential about humanity.' Will Ashon
'Wonderful - a collection of brilliantly inventive absurdist tales from our increasingly fictional reality. Charlie Hill's eclectic pantheon of characters try to make sense of a strange world. They never can. It's not their fault. It makes no sense. How else to describe this book? If Kafka had come from Birmingham and written about climate change, feminism, war, food, parenting and space travel, then the result might well have resembled The State of Us. The best sort of hilarious and poignant satire.' Joanna Kavenna
'With tremendous storytelling flair, The Pirate Queen recasts one of Ireland's unknown heroines and places her adventures centre stage. Exploring female resilience and strength, and the power of stories to shape the world, I loved this brief but buoyant novel.' Ruth Gilligan
'The Pirate Queen is a compelling and vividly realised story of solidarity, courage and resistance across the generations. Historically rich, with a lively and complex cast of female characters, it is also a story about the power and importance of stories: to, succour, inspire, and spur us on to dare and defy in our turn. A wonderfully engaging and timely book.' Fran Lock
'Lively, lyrical and engrossing, the novel brings the past to life in the tale of the Irish Boudicca, a fearless leader whose story is used by a rebellious governess to inspire her pupil to resist a forced marriage. I found it irresistible.' Miranda Seymour
Charlie Hill is the chronicler Birmingham needs. Clear-eyed and sharply written, this a memoir - a set of poetic postcards, really - which offers a kaleidoscope of the past, a history of Charlie and of the city itself. It never strays into nostalgia or cosiness, but rather offers the reader glittering bright glimpses of the eighties, nineties and noughties. Natalie Haynes
‘Charlie Hill’s laconic and bitter-sweet memoir of afternoons -no, years!- frittered away in the edgy suburbs of south Birmingham during the stoned and feckless last decades of the 20th century is mordant, touching, and -uniquely for a work of autobiography- entirely without vanity. Hill’s many, notable gifts as a writer -as he steers his readers through the callow excesses of youth towards the getting of wisdom that comes with age (and family life)- include his narrative economy, his honesty, and his pin-point clarity. This is truly how it was for all of us back then, when we were free and tireless, young and lost.’ Jim Crace
‘Hill’s economic autobiography is a simplistic list of addresses, dead end jobs, cultural ephemera, and brief assignations, garnished with two or three short paragraphs of barely formed reflection. And yet, in reducing his life to these most basic elements, it manages to be a more profound comment on existence then many more self-consciously analytical efforts. As if to confound Wittgenstein, it appears the unexamined life was worth living after all.’ Stewart Lee
‘Utterly rancid. I loved it’ Stewart Home
"With Walking Backwards Charlie Hill gives us dense fragments of closely-observed lives, obsessive interiors and broken, unspoken loves. The result is touching, funny, melancholy and entirely worth reading." AL Kennedy
'An engrossing piece that…were the author French and his readers all French, might well have been regarded as a worthy late edition to the school of existentialist literature' Nicholas Royle, Best British Short Stories (Salt Publishing, 2017)
'Sensitive, evocative and touching, Stuff begins with a density of detail and then sheds names, memories, family, home and belongings as the narrator leads the reader to a brink.' Alison Moore
'The novel is a delight as it sets up its target – the mediocrity of commercialised popular culture – and then throws every ball in the shy to knock it down. It’s sharp, caustic, intelligent, often hilarious and, yes, ultimately serious, as decent satire should be, as well as providing a handy check-list for movements in modern art and literature, and a hard look at the way these are commodified.' Charles Lambert
‘Every city in Britain has its Moseley, the edgy, arty Birmingham anti-suburb where the studes and crusties come to rent and squat. Charlie Hill's intelligent and witty The Space Between Things captures their culture with brutal, unpretentious clarity. His novel charts the years between Moseley’s first rave and the height of the road protests, an age of well-meaning self-indulgence, where the partying never ends but the politics never quite get going. It is, like the suburb itself, playful, unruly and bursting with generous energy.’ Jim Crace
‘What I like very much about this novel is that it vividly captures a moment in Britain's recent past, and takes us inside a world and a milieu which most readers won't have known before. And of course, as a tragic love story, it packs a considerable punch.’ Jonathan Coe