You could get a hybrid and it would work for you - no question. How well it would work, is the question. A "mild" hybrid would feel just like an ICE car to drive and run. You'd hardly know the electric bit existed. Personally, I wouldn't bother, as any fuel savings are likely to vanish into overall running costs at such low annual mileages. I think it will just be an ICE car with more stuff to go wrong, to be honest.
The "self-charging hybrids" are really just "marketingspeak" for a hybrid that can't manage without its ICE engine and can't be plugged in. Some will have a very small amount of low speed electric-only range, but in low mileage applications, they tend to give their ICE engines a hard time, as they rarely use them and when they do, they don't use them for long, so the poor things rarely warm up properly. However, there are exceptions. Some are more like ICEs with a tiny bit of electric-only capability (often just car park speed manoeuvring), but others, are virtually electric vehicles with a small generator in the back. They have significant electric-only range (80 miles or so, in some cases, like the Golf e-hybrid) before they need to use their engine.
The "plug-in hybrids" vary enormously. Some (like the more "electric" of the self-charging hybrids), have a significant electric-only range - over 100 miles, so you get the real possibility that you can do most of your everyday journeys on electric-only. The downside is that you still end up servicing an engine each year, that has hardly run.
If it was me, I'd go fully-electric and forget about any engine-related hassle (servicing, cam belts, exhaust , DPFs, clutch, plugs, etc) forever. (But that's easy for me to say, because I am me)! No they won't do the claimed "official" range in real life - just like ICE cars don't, but most people will get at least 3/4 of it. You won't forget to plug it in, any more than you'll forget to fill an ICE car with fuel. For the longer runs, public charging isn't the nightmare that some would have you believe. If you like playing with "apps" on your phone, you can do cool things like warming it up before you leave the house, but you don't HAVE to do any of that if you don't want to. Unlike an ICE car, they will start blowing warm air into the cabin within a few seconds of startup. I would pick one that has a "CCS" charging socket, rather than the "ChADeMo" socket used on the early Leaf and some Renault, which is fast becoming the "Betamax" of charging sockets.