The Incredible Worlds of Wally McDoogle

The Incredible Worlds Of Wally McDoogle is a series of books by Bill Myers, which follow the strange adventures of Wally, the world's most accident-prone kid, and his friends Wall Street and Opera, always ending with an Aesop derived from Christianity.

"Wally: Wall Street not making money off of me would be like water flowing uphill, or snow in July, or for them to make a show about a weird blue dog that gives clues."
 * Added Alliterative Appeal: The titles of the books consistently started doing this with book 5: My Life As Dinosaur Dental Floss.
 * : My Life As A Toasted Time Traveler "My Life As a Splatted Flat Quarterback" "My Life As a Stupendously Stomped Soccer Star".
 * Animal Wrongs Group: Save The Snails
 * Annoying Younger Sibling: Carrie, Wally's little sister, who rather comes across as a Sally Expy
 * Anti-Hero: Opera is a Type I. Wally is a Type II. Wall Street alternates between Type I and Type V.
 * A Day At the Bizarro: Wally's adventures are pretty strange, but the winner for the most BLAM-arific installment of the series would be #13 My Life As A Blundering Ballerina. Basically, Wally and Wall Street think each other have it easy, so they switch places to see who has it tougher. The book is chock full of Big Lipped Alligator Moments involving them (mostly Wally) doing each other's stuff (Wall Street plays football while Wally babysits a houseful of rowdy children). It starts to make more sense at the end, but it still qualifies for this trope.
 * Bad Future: My Life As A Toasted Time Traveler.
 * Future Me Scares Me:.
 * Bound and Gagged: Happens in several of the books.
 * The Bully: Gary and Maddog.
 * Chew Toy: Basically, the whole premise of the series is that Wally is an extreme one of these.
 * Character Development: Subverted, Wally's dad wants Wally to 'be a man' and that writing seems lame. Come book #11, where Dad, after, accepts that Wally wants to be a writer and thinks he's a man. Unfortunately, after that book, Dad's back to wanting Wally to be a man and that writing seems lame. Though that may be because of how book #11 "Polluted Pond Scum", is the semi-Grand Finale of the series.
 * Gary the Gorilla, the local bully, also gets some in the first book, and even seems to be becoming friends with Wally, but it's still subverted, in all proceeding books, he's back to bullying everyone.
 * Clark Kenting: Parodied along with a whole host of Superhero Tropes in Wally's stories
 * Closer to Earth: Wally's mom.
 * Dark and Troubled Past:
 * Wall Street, as revealed in book 3.
 * in book 1.
 * Darker and Edgier: My Life As Crocodile Junkfood was considerably darker than any of the previous books as well as any of the subsequent books, presenting the reader with several cases of Family-Unfriendly Violence and at least one Tear Jerker moment.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Wally himself.
 * Denser and Wackier: Book 5 was the first case of this. From that point, the books in the series would alternate; some plots being relatively plausible and some just being insane.
 * Disappeared Dad: Gary
 * The Dreaded: Gary, at first.
 * Embarrassing Nickname: Gary the Gorilla, which is also his Berserk Button.
 * Freudian Trio: Junk-food munching soft-hearted Opera is The Id, ruthless, intelligent Corrupt Corporate Executive With A Heart Of Gold in the making Wall Street is The Superego, and Wally is The Ego.
 * Grand Finale: Book 11: My Life As Polluted Pond Scum. Didn't stop the series from continuing, though; albeit under a new publisher.
 * Heroic Sacrifice: in book 4..
 * Hollywood Nerd: Type 1.
 * Took a Level In Jerkass: Wall Street in book 21. "Skysurfing Skateboarder". Here Wall Street couldn't care less what plans Wally had with Opera and Little Buddy Leroy, she just keeps telling Wally that if you want to win, you gotta put yourself before everyone else. She does this more than once during the book.
 * Jerk Jock: Wally's older brothers can be this on occasion, usually via annoying pranks more than anything else.
 * Karma Houdini:
 * The Klutz: Wally, and how
 * Lemony Narrator: Wally
 * Lethal Chef: Wally's little sister, Carrie. It's a running gag throughout the series that she is this, as, when it's her turn to cook, she dishes out stuff like candied Brussels sprouts, cauliflower cobbler, and boiled ice cream. Wally is also implied to be this in book #24. At one point he cooks breakfast for  and not only burns the toast, eggs, and bacon, but even their orange juice.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: ''My Life As A Computer Cockroach": Long story short, Wally's antics with his computer, which now has the ability to affect reality with what is typed into it, ultimately lead up to.
 * No Sense of Humor: Pretty much everyone in Wally's superhero stories (usually the superhero) groans at "bad" jokes, even the ones that are Actually Pretty Funny. Everyone in the "Real World" is also this to a lesser extent. And they all think that the reader has no sense of humor too, expecting you to groan at every joke. (Something it shares with sister series Mcgee And Me.)
 * Only Known By Their Nickname: Averted for Opera, whose real name was revealed to be Oliver in book 7 "Human Hockey Puck", but played straight with Wall Street, whose real name is not revealed.
 * Post Script Season: Book 12 onward; the closest thing the series had to an ongoing plot was Wally's dad trying to get his son to be more like a real man, and this was finally resolved in book 11.
 * Pursued Protagonist: Wally in books 4 and 5.
 * Running Gag: Gary trying to coax Wally into surrendering to the authorities throughout book 5.
 * Series Continuity Error: In book #18 "Beat-Up Basketball Backboard", Wall Street mentions making money off of Wally since kindergarten, but Wally's only known her (and Opera) since the first book, where they were twelve.
 * Skewed Priorities: My Lif As Dinosaur Dental Floss: Wall Street gives away her hiding place to the terrorists when she tries to catch a dollar bill that one of said terrorists dropped.
 * Shaggy Dog Story:
 * Spy Fiction: Book 14 is basically one huge parody of the Martini variety.
 * Take That: There's quite a few in book 18, such as this rather harsh one at Blues Clues:
 * Take That: There's quite a few in book 18, such as this rather harsh one at Blues Clues:


 * Teen Superspy: In book 14. Naturally, this was Played for Laughs
 * Three Amigos: Wally, Opera, and Wall Street
 * Two Guys and A Girl: The main trio fit both the gender roles and the trope, but while Wall Street is the girl, she's The Lancer, while Opera is The Chick.
 * Who's Laughing Now?: The Big Bad in My Life As Polluted Pond Scum.
 * WhereTheHeckIsMiddleton: It's never shown were Wally's town is, but there are several implications that it may be in Ohio or another state in the Midwest.
 * With Friends Like These: Wally's relationship with Wall Street is best described as this.