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The Gospel According to Larry Mass Market Paperback – May 13 2003

4.3 out of 5 stars 39 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Laurel Leaf; Reprint edition (May 13 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0440237920
  • ISBN-13: 978-0440237921
  • Product Dimensions: 10.4 x 1.8 x 17.6 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 113 g
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars 39 customer reviews
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #170,960 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Written as an alleged account that a teen prophet handed to the author to publish, Tashjian's (Tru Confessions) funny, thoughtful novel takes on some sophisticated issues. Highly intelligent 17-year-old Josh Swensen wants to save the world and hopefully seduce Beth, the best friend for whom he pines. Josh's self-deprecating, humorous tone carries readers swiftly along ("Can someone please explain to me how this preoccupation with dopey athletes happens even to headstrong young women who... score 750s on their SATs?" he says when Beth gravitates to "Todd Terrific, a new jock she was obsessed with"). As the anonymous Larry, the hero starts a Web site (www.thegospelaccordingtolarry.com) on which he rants against consumer culture and its obsession with celebrities. But as Larry's popularity grows, Josh's identity becomes impossible to hide, forcing him to reevaluate his medium for instigating change. The popularity of his site which contains his "sermons," photos of some of his 75 possessions and parodies of ad campaigns may not be entirely convincing to some teens, but his compelling character and other clever flourishes, like Larryfest, the advertising-free rock festival put together by U2's Bono, or the make-up counter at Bloomingdale's, where Josh goes to connect with the spirit of his dead mother, keep the novel clipping along. Tashjian not only gives readers a good primer on materialism (and Thoreau), she also makes them think about a different kind of activism. Ages 12-up.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From School Library Journal

Gr 8 Up-Josh is bright, articulate, idealistic, and in love with Beth, the girl next door and his best friend since sixth grade. Afraid to declare himself-especially in light of Beth's flirtations with a socially connected but intellectually suspect football player-he pours his energy into a clever Web site, through which his alter ego, Larry, advocates introspection, tolerance, and anticonsumerism. Beth adores Larry, as do thousands of other teens and adults across the nation. Now Josh has a new problem: when and how does he reveal Larry's true identity to Beth? Also, all of his best intentions become subverted as more people embrace Larry's values and a media circus ensues as Josh's identity is revealed. Big issues are addressed here: alienation, truthfulness, family loyalty, fame, privacy, friendship and love, and spiritual guidance. Larry's sermons are brief and pithy, and interspersed between Josh's fast-paced narrative of the events of the spring before his high school graduation and that summer. Tashjian's gift for portraying bright adolescents with insight and humor reaches near perfection here. The author proposes one more conceit on top of the Josh/Larry dichotomy: she offers herself as a character, presenting Josh's narrative as the purported manuscript she is handed in a grocery-store parking lot. A terrific read with a credible and lovable main character.

Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Mass Market Paperback
Josh is a bored seventeen-year-old genius. That is just a recipe for disaster!

Just for something to do, he creates a website where he posts all of his rants about our celebrity-obsessed culture, anti-communism, and any other random thing that he thinks of. Josh names his site "The Gospel According To Larry" because that is the most unreligious name he could possibly think of. He's getting two or three hits a day, until some kids from his school find the page and he's soon getting a few hundred visitors a day to his website.

Then Bono, the lead singer of U2, finds Josh's site. And he mentions the site on national television.

Josh instantly begins getting millions of hits a day and everyone wants to know who Larry is.

Then betagold, a fan of Larry's, begins leaving comments on Josh's site about how he should just come out and tell everyone who Larry really is.

As things begin to spin out of control, Josh goes crazy! What will he do to save himself? Will he ever reveal that he's "Larry"?

This is a really funny book, because I can totally imagine something like this actually happening! Sometimes the middle is a little slow, but overall the book is a really great read!

Reviewed by: Taylor Rector
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Format: Mass Market Paperback
How could someone take such an awesome spin on the teen wonder boy story and do so terribly?
I mean, the idea isn't half bad. Ridiculously smart but strongly anti-social boy starts website, becomes famous, and the fades into oblivion.
But come on! The plot holes in this book are more numerous than
than the abundant footnotes. <SUP>1 </SUP>
For one thing, the major conflict in this book is that "Larry's" audience doesn't know he's a boy in High School, but in the few rants the author most proudly displays in the book, he alludes to the facts he is in High School directly. You wouldn't need to analyse tree patterns or his few possetion, it was right in front of them.
Besides that gapping plot hole and others, there is the simple fact that Josh, the primary character, is a complete jerk. I found myself rooting for the other side in every situation.
In teen summer reads such as these, the primary purpose for the book is for Teens to identify with the main character, which I could not.
None of the book's ill-begotten attempts at critiquing mass media made me feel any type of outrage. The book felt to me like one whiny boy's story of how it's SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO hard being a prodigy and having everyone love you.
See this? This is the world's smallest violen playing a song for you.
<SUP> Which cease being amusing after the first ten pages</SUP>
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Format: Hardcover
The book "The Gospel According to Larry" is a great philisophical novel about a very intelligent boy; Josh/larry; who starts a website about anti-consumerism([...] This book sucked me in and didn't let go until I finised it. In the book Josh only owns seventy-five items and whenever he wants anything he thinks over it for days until he decides he really wants it. I notice myself thinking really hard about an item before I buy it. This started to happen after I read this book. I will pass this on to my friends because some of my friends pay ridiculous prices from plain shrits. The message I got from this story is to think for yourself and don't follow the masses. Follow the beat of your own drum! Be unique and be yourself. The language for this book goes right with the story. The book was not too long or too short it was just enough to finish with a well fed mind. The good thing about this book is that it is a true story about a real person who actually came up with these ideas and sermons for the website and the book. The little story before the book about how Josh had to track down Janet Tashjain to publish this book is very interesting. This would make a great book to read in classrooms and discuss because consumerism is a part of every day life. Quoted in one of larry's sermons " Slip on your Gap jeans, your Nike T-shirt, your Reeboks- or maybe even your Cons if you think that makes you cool in a Kurt Cobain kind of way etc." This makes you realize how advertizing companies are invading our daily lives. The book was profound and a great read; so if your into anti-consumerism and want to enjoy a good book read "The Gospel According To Larry".
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Format: Mass Market Paperback
After reading this book, The Gospel According to Larry by Janet Tashjian, I am struck with a display of theme that is deeper and much more philosophical than any other young adult book I have read. In fact, this novel does not serve you only one theme but it gives you a two-in-one deal displaying a subliminal theme under the obvious root theme of the novel. Josh, a.k.a. Larry, the "code-name" he uses for his website, is the point of the obvious theme of the book. The lesson about human nature that jumps out at you first in the novel is that of Josh's website and "Larry" which helps Josh tell the world about commercialism and how it is taking over America and a few other ideas about cultural insufficiencies. Larry, the figurehead of the operation, launches a wave of lessons to kids across the United States and it catches on as his themes shine into society. Underneath all of the quite apparent themed material, though, is the underlying and perhaps more important theme of the book. This theme that encompasses the true essence of the novel is that of Josh's love for society and thus his extreme obsession with trying to help the world. Josh tells the reader various times throughout his story that all he wants to do is simply aid the world and make it a better place, that is why he created the website and Larry, that is why he faked his death, that is why he has every tried to do anything; to change the world into what Josh thought it should be was his and the novels true theme and gave this book a place in the classics.
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