Goody Two-Shoes by Anonymous

(6 User reviews)   1575
By Penelope Lefevre Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Foundation
Anonymous Anonymous
English
Imagine a little girl who learns to read so well she changes her entire world. That's 'Goody Two-Shoes,' an old tale that's part fairy-tale charm, part how-to manual for being a good person—way before it became a slang term. The main conflict? Orphaned Margery Meanwell is left with nothing but her wits and a single shoe. Through pure brainpower, kindness, and learning, she earns clothes, a second shoe (hence the name), and even helps catch a ghost! But it's not just a sweet story; it's a clever disguised argument about education, curiosity, and class. Is it a simple children's tale or a radical 1765 manifesto on equality? Crack it open and see if this neglected 'first children's novel' still has power to surprise you.
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'Goody Two-Shoes' sounds like an insult, right? But before it became a stick for judging good girls, it was the name of a book. Published in 1765 by an unknown author, it’s often called the first children’s novel. And when you dig in, it’s weirder, bolder, and more fun than its saintly reputation suggests.

The Story

Little Margery Meanwell and her brother Tommy are orphaned. A kind clergyman takes them in. Tommy goes to sea, but Margery stays. She is so desperate to read that she pays local boys to teach her. Fast—she becomes the smartest kid in town. But her real adventure starts when she gets a job as a schoolteacher. She devises games to teach morals and explains natural science simply. She even exposes a pretended ghost as a cat stuck in a bellows! Eventually, she marries a wealthy gent, becoming good but not forgotten celebrity. She teaches reading and helps poor neighbors.

Why You Should Read It

Read this book for the sheer glee of seeing a child outthink the adults. It’s crammed with wild stuff: a ghost is a cat, young readers are taught advanced ideas about the earth's motion, and it screams check-everyone-should-be-literate. Two shoes become a mascot for kindness, yes, but also for get-ahead-through-learning. Watch for the sly detail that real magic obeys science. The book feels like

Final Verdict

Who needs this on their shelf? Absolutely perfect for parents wanting a gentler 'struggle-to-triumph' story without that grit. But equally for anybody grumpy about talk-down kids' stories: this one respects its audience enough to feed them language lessons, puzzles, and one unkillable cat. History geeks will gawk—it’s getting free into a 260-year-old schooling debate. Close with comfort that a girl’s great power was just spotting a lie and reading well. That never goes out of style.



ℹ️ Public Domain Notice

This historical work is free of copyright protections. Enjoy reading and sharing without restrictions.

Charles Garcia
1 year ago

I found the author's tone to be very professional yet accessible, the breakdown of complex theories into digestible segments is masterfully done. This is a solid reference for both beginners and experts.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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