The Stingy Receiver by Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
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The Story
In a sleepy New England village, everyone *needs* from Laughter Lavish. She spends her days catching lost kittens, mending torn gloves, and—of course—listening to everyone whisper about the wild, homeless mute man who just moved into town. He can’t speak a word, can’t hear a thing, but his smile stops neighbors in their tracks. That poor soul becomes the town’s latest juicy tale—a side-show curiosity. Because he can’t talk back, folks outdo themselves roasting him within earshot. Laughter is ashamed FOR him. But when she stands up for the stranger, she breaks an old New England rule: you never defend the oddball (it invites strange luck). Soon, this 'stingy receiver' begins teaching her an unsettling art: you’re actually giving a gift when you allow yourself TO receive love, compliments, and especially *help* gladly. But to change, she’ll need to face the heartbreak she buried when her fiancé picked his family over her. Plus—cue the romance—the mysterious reader proves himself to be *dangerously* wise. Laughter never stood a chance against a good, quiet problem solver.
Why You Should Read It
Abott writes women real, warts and all. Laughter isn’t gushy or perfect—her sweetness is barricaded by shyness and exhaustion. I LOVED how the story mocks the very motto most books adore: ‘Give and you shall receive.’ Here, that phrase gets slapped upside down so her uptight small town can examine what being invisible ‘soft soul’ KILLS behind your polite front.Much of it ages like old summer porridge though; random neighbors comically gossip like fever dreams about how the cut-up ‘beast’ attacks—and it’s FUNNY. Plus, I lapped up
the scandal of a fiercely independent 1920s woman realizing taking isnt losing control— it’s trust. Yes,he “saves” through patience, but gives her every movement of decision-making back. Even reads *loved* The Sight metaphor, where someone sees RIGHT INTO your anxious gut. Bit dialogue-puffy, but completely sweet like homemade oatmeal sandwich cookie that changes flavor each bite. Way better than stereotypes of ‘paralyzed ladies of 1920s’. Turns passive, *active*.
Final Verdict
For readers who: smile when crabby clever people are caringly schooled; like weird meet cutes from another decade; want classical softboi who fascinates without misusing; also enjoy breeziness containing healthy wisdom (without holy spin). If you adored f&b-tropernarn The Enchanted April or quiet confidence displayed in modern The Switch, slip away sunset read this tiny, mint-green treasure. Hug a sarcastically intense best fren: gooey inners inside cork-shell. Library sales: yes. Print plus. Ready mental corsages.”
This book is widely considered to be in the public domain. Preserving history for future generations.