Small Acts of Kindness by Caroline Day
Kiki grew up in New Zealand, dreaming of one day going to Glastonbury Festival.
Now, mourning the loss of her beloved Yaya – the woman who raised her – she travels to the UK to follow that dream. It is only when she leaves home that she realises just how sheltered her life has been up until now.
Ned lives an active and exciting life. Well, he did until the accident. Now, he’s woken from his coma, except no one knows. He can hear everything happening around him but can’t make his body respond.
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Still grieving for her best friend, the one person who’d known how difficult her marriage was, Mrs Malley, finds herself lonely and isolated with only her dog, Wordsworth, to keep her company.
These three strangers are each in need of a little kindness in their lives, and this beautifully poignant and uplifting novel shows us the world through their eyes whilst highlighting the power of human connection.
My Review
When I started reading, I thought ‘what is this?’ A kooky girl from New Zealand called Kiki, who is so naive she appears to have no idea what’s going on. Then there’s Ned, whose active life was cut short by an accident which has left him with locked-in syndrome. Except he’s awake in his head but can’t tell anyone. Then we have Mrs Malley, a crotchety 84-year-old who never minces her words. Not many people like her, apart from her dog Wordsworth, who is always escaping and causing trouble.
How on earth are these characters going to form the basis of any kind of novel? I’ll admit it took me a while to get into it, but when I did, it was a revelation. Not all books need a beautiful heroine, with flowing locks and a size eight figure. Or a ruggedly handsome Mr Darcy, emerging from the water in a soaking wet shirt. Or even a kind old granny who would die for her offspring. Mrs Malley doesn’t have any.
Kiki wears frog wellies and dungaree shorts like a ten-year-old and Ned is – well – locked in, so he can’t fight his corner and win the girl. Mrs M is a cantankerous old bat, except no-one knows what she had to endure in her marriage of 60 plus years to the insufferable Roger. He made her give up work, even though she was runner-up in the Pitman typing competition in Cheltenham in 1952 (I remember this albeit 20 years later – I can even picture the building round the corner from where I live. In fact I think it’s still there).
Mrs M had a friend called Harriet who died shortly after Roger. He never approved of her. She wrote a poem about their bucket list (except she called it something that rhymes with ‘bucket’ but that would never pass Amazon’s rules). It included riding in an open top Jaguar, dying their hair pink and sunbathing in the nude. I’ll pass on the latter thank you.
Poor Kiki. After her Yaya died she came to England to go to Glastonbury and to search for the person who supposedly poisoned her mother. Except she can’t even work out how to use her phone let alone surf the internet. Poor Ned. His life is permanently on hold. Is there any hope that he might recover? His stepfather Maxwell thinks so and he used to be a doctor. And poor Mrs M. All she has left is Wordsworth. But now she has Kiki, who exploded into her life and is probably more trouble than a mad dog. But she reminds Mrs M a little of Harriet, eccentric, and no filter.
By the last few chapters, I didn’t want it to end. And I cried. I admit I cried on and off for about the last two hours. Not sobbing, just a few tears trickling down my face. Just peeling onions darling, nothing to see here. I shall miss them all.
Many thanks to @Tr4cyF3nt0n for inviting me to be part of the #CompulsiveReaders #blogtour and to NetGalley for an ARC.

About the Author
Caroline Day is an author, journalist and consultant editor from Crouch End, North London, where she lives with her husband and two beagle-cross rescue dogs, Snoopy and Charlie Brown. Her debut novel, Hope Nicely’s Lessons for Life, was a Sunday Times bestseller, Goldsboro Books’ Book Of The Month, and was awarded the Joan Hessayon Prize for new writers by the Romantic Novelists Association of which she is a member. Her second novel Small Acts of Kindness is published in Spring 2024.
