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A trilogy of young-adult anti-consumerist/political/romantic novels by Janet Tashjian. The first novel, The Gospel According to Larry was released on May 13, 2003. Two sequels were released in 2004 and 2008 respectively.

In the first book, Josh Swensen is a gifted 17-year-old with a best friend, Beth, whom he secretly loves, and a stepfather in marketing. His self-proclaimed goal is to make the world a better place, and he hates the consumerist society of mainstream America. Josh Swensen is also Larry, a well-known anticonsumerist Internet guru who becomes more and more popular throughout the course of the book, and his fans even organize a fundraiser Woodstock-ish concert in his honour.

Eventually Josh's identity is revealed by an old woman named Tracy Hawthorne, username betagold, who has been attempting to unravel Larry's true identity throughout the entire book. After being exposed to the media, Josh simply can't take the media pressure anymore, lamenting how Larry himself has become a consumer product. His stepfather disowns him, his best friend reveals that she sees their relationship Like Brother and Sister, and even his hideout near Walden Pond is found by media sleuths and run into the ground. Miserable and desparate, Josh decides to fake his own suicide (a "pseudocide" in his words) in order to escape the media spotlight. While he manages to disappear convincingly, it turns out that Larry has become even bigger in "death" than he was in life, and Josh vows to lay low and incognito until the whole media mess washes over.

The second book, Vote for Larry, is about Josh's failed run for President of the United States after un-faking his death and re-emerging into the public spotlight; while the third book, Larry and the Meaning of Life has all of Josh's friends conspiring to cure him of his bout of depression with the Batman Gambit of the century involving a terrorist plot, betagold pretending to need a kidney transplant from Josh (which is convincingly faked), and a group of gurus which justs happens to include the second love of his life, Janine. That's just the tip of the iceberg. Did I forget to mention that THIS WAS ALL ORCHESTRATED BY A NINETEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL??

Tropes used in The Gospel According to Larry include:


  • Cannot Spit It Out
  • Did Not Get the Girl - one layer of the first book's ending. Beth rejects Josh as a lover because she thinks of him as a brother which is promptly changed in the sequel, and not only that, ends up dating The Jock from the first act of the book again because he has supposedly reformed. Talk about a kick to the balls; no wonder the guy faked his own suicide.
  • Distracted by the Sexy - the source of a lot of the Unresolved Sexual Tension comedy between Beth and Josh. Specifically Beth's lips.
  • False Start
  • Footnote Fever
  • Green Aesop
  • Hollywood Hacking - Betagold claims to have found "Larry" using IP address tracing, but since Josh was accessing his own servers, one wonders how she got his IP address in the first place. The described system of Josh using disposable cell phones as modems is unnecessary for the same reasons. If betagold did manage to get Josh's IP address, she would still probablyonly be able to trace it to the ISP that issued it, which won't give out customer information to anyone without a warrant. On the other hand, the publically accessible whois information for his domain registry is required by law to be accurate and up-to-date (though it could possibly point to his hosting service, not him).
  • Literary Agent Hypothesis (beginning and conclusion)
  • Love Letter Lunacy - Josh writes such a letter after seeing Simon and Beth making snow angels. He lampshades how corny his letter is, but as he admits "the words just wouldn't stop".
  • Love Triangle - Vote for Larry has two: Josh/Simon/Beth and Josh/Beth/Janine.
  • Moment Killer (at Larryfest)
  • Secret Identity - both Tracy Hawthorne (betagold) and Josh (Larry).
  • Sequel Hook - Vote for Larry ends with Josh trying to find Janine, who he had accidentally accused of being The Mole during his failed presidential campaign, promising to return when he finds her.
    • Also seen in Larry and the Meaning of Life, which ends with Josh having to decide between taking a train to Princeton, where he'd go to college, or Miami, where other adventures would presumably play out. His choice is not disclosed, leaving the reader in suspense.
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed - an interesting variation: by the time Vote for Larry was ready for publication, the Democratic party hadn't announced their ticket for the 2004 election. So instead of going after John Kerry, Tashjian inserted a faceless Democrat and decided to attack the Party in general, and Bill Clinton in particular. Every other instance of a celebrity appearing in the books, however, is done in full with no apologies.
  • Society Marches On / Technology Marches On - The plot of the first novel is centered around the idea that Josh's well written, enlightening sermons create a massive fanbase and start a pop-culture movement. The original book was published in 2003, making it contemporary with the rise in popularity of blogs and so forth. Despite this, no blogger ever reached anywhere near the success Josh did (who had an entire festival centered around him, which was compared to Woodstock and even had U2 in attendance, and became basically a living prophet in many character's eyes).
  • The Knights Who Say Squee - Due to their music's connections with his past and Bono's political activism in general, Josh can't resist going fangirl when he finally gets to meet U2.
  • The Mole - Tim Hawthorne in Vote For Larry.
  • Victorious Childhood Friend - possibly Beth, depending on how you view Meaning 's ending.
  • What the Hell, Hero? - Beth's calling-out Josh after finding out he faked his own suicide to escape media scrutiny.
  • Why Couldn't You Be Different?