Dilbert Books
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The Corporate World is Just One Big CubeReview Date: 2007-07-22
A must-haveReview Date: 2004-09-13
This book is great, a must-have addition to the library of any Scott Adams fan. And, the finger-puppets make it that much better. This is perhaps the best Dilbert book of them all - buy it!
Cliché in a Box (or Cube)Review Date: 2008-05-27
What happens in a cubicle? Oh, you know. The boss comes around and indicates that he is the great power behind everything, though he actually knows nothing about the product. If anything goes wrong, downsizing of those best suited to fix the problem follows.
What of marketing? Well, they are selling a product we have yet to build, for a price we are unable to achieve, with features that marketing neglected to tell engineering about. When all else fails, hire a consultant!
But Dilbert also has to face things like synergies. What are synergies? Ah, well, Dilbert can tell you that when you hear a cliché word like synergies, down-sizing is sure to follow in Cubeville, along with additional doses of cluelessness.
Any Dilbert book is perfect for a modern office worker, especially if they are in engineering, as Dilbert is. This collection of cartoons published from 9/1/96 to 1/18/98 are sure to give you more than a few chuckles as you recognize behaviors from an office you once worked in, or, if you are unfortunate, an office your are currently working in. At least you get gain some perspective and humor from your misery!
Enjoy!
The best Dilbert collection ever!!!Review Date: 2004-08-07
Absolutely hilarious!Review Date: 2003-12-21


Highlight of my morningReview Date: 2007-05-19
looking forward to yet another day!Review Date: 2006-05-28
Scott Adams is my heroReview Date: 2006-03-24
Dilbert -- better than last yearReview Date: 2006-03-14
Can't do without it.Review Date: 2006-03-13
I tried to persuade myself that I could use that one, and do without the daily, but I caved in, and ordered this again. Makes the working day get off to a routinely funny start, always a chuckle. A great gift too.
I can't fault it.

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Management by ViceReview Date: 2002-03-15
Satiric Perfection!Review Date: 2004-08-04
Humorous, yet candidReview Date: 2002-02-05
An Unusual Book of SatireReview Date: 2001-11-13
I find this to be a most delightful book. If you have ever worked in an office, design or R&D outfit, you can really relate to the adventures portrayed therein. I spent 35 years in the egg-laying part of the duck and found the barbed lampoons a titillating reflection of my own adventures. There's also a pleasant sprinkling of cartoons and verse the summarize each fo the 11 episodes. The heroine survives a cliffhanger for those of you that relish a bit of adventure. It's one of those "once you pick it up, you can't put it down" pieces that are a fast read and leave you satisfied like a good pastrami sandwich. For you managers, the Scots have an appropriate saying, "would some power the great giver give us to see ourselves as others see us". Give it a go!!
Only Somewhat Humorous and WeakReview Date: 2004-08-03

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Sometimes I feel as Scott Adams sits in my cubicle...Review Date: 2008-02-27
The consultants hired by my company are really as cynical and expensive as Dogbert
...sometimes I had the feeling, Scott Adams worked in my office...
Amazing!
Highly recommended, at least for self-defense purposes!
Classic DilbertReview Date: 2008-01-21
Classic Dilbert Business HumorReview Date: 2001-09-21
i'm not anti-business im anti idiotReview Date: 2001-06-26
The title pretty much says it all....Review Date: 2002-10-15
In his biography, Scott Adams is described as both an engineer and as a member of Mensa. Inspite of this, however, he has a sense of humor....
I'm sure that this confirmation of the absurdity of corporate "culture" has helped more than a few intelligent wage-slaves maintain their sanity over the years. It almost maintained mine.

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Fab-O-Licious!Review Date: 2008-03-24
Scott Adams is a genius.
Laugh till you cry funny!
Keep it comin'!
A great Dilbert bookReview Date: 2004-05-28
5 Stars All the WayReview Date: 2002-06-16
Magnificent Book!Review Date: 2001-12-26
Dilbert DIES!Review Date: 2002-08-19

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A dose of laughter at hand.Review Date: 2006-12-07
The comics in this book touch on all aspects of life with computers, and range from laugh out loud funny to thoughtful, and the situations flow from absurd to so spot-on real that you might think that the authors were secretly watching you.
Buy this book if you'd like to keep a dose of laughter at hand.
Geek Humour at it's bestReview Date: 2004-04-30
Apple addicts and Linux loversReview Date: 2004-04-30
Keep an eye on your copy though. Mine has almost walked away with friends several times. Since not all the friends were geeks, even technophobes should give it a this book a try.
It's awesome!Review Date: 2004-04-29
MyMac.com Book ReviewReview Date: 2004-05-21
Of course it's easy to enjoy a cartoon book by a pair of cartoonists that share your prejudices. It is obvious from the cartoons that Nitrozac and Snaggy are Macintosh loving, Linux leaning, Microsoft loathing geeks. Hmmm, sounds like me.
Not that Nitrozac and Snaggy are totally one-eyed. They still have a dig at Apple and Macintosh owners along the way. Unlike quite a lot of cartoons about tech these two also see the more human side, just as likely to make a joke about your cat's relationship to you and the computer as poke fun at LARTing end-users or pointy-headed bosses. Their cartoons are more about living with technology than working with it.
The book reproduces a couple of hundred of 'The Joy of Tech' cartoons from their website, in improved color and resolution. The website features a new cartoon every couple of days. There are also a small number that are original for the book and some funny marginalia in a couple of spots. It also has the matching JoyPoll and a short comment about the cartoon in a 'JoyWorld' section at the back of the book.
I find a fairly large number of the cartoons repeatedly funny and most of the rest worth a chuckle. These two have a good eye for the whimsical, ironic and downright funny side to a wired in, geek life. They even manage to get in a sly reference to geek site Slashdot with a fake O'Reilly book, "Trolling In a Nutshell" with a troll wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with "FIRST POST" on the cover and an Introduction by 'Anonymous Coward'.
Oh, that reminds me. The book has a very Wozniak foreword by Steve himself and an introduction by David Pogue that is nowhere near as good as the book (I'm sorry David, but any self-respecting geek [male or female] would rather do almost anything than edit the Windows registry, starting with install a decent operating system and working all the way through to changing jobs, heck, I'd rather sleep with Jobs.)
The book is broken up into various sections, each with a theme. It starts with "Boot-Up" and continues with "4nim4l cr4ck3rs" (most about cats), the whimsical "Geek Love", "Hacks and Cracks" (I loved the couple who want to get housing within 50 meters of a war-chalked wall), "Techie-daze", "How about them *nix" (featuring the luscious 'Linux Lass'), "The Joy of Mac", "Who do you want to poke fun at today?" (You'll enjoy the 'Stress Relief Dartboard'), "Sci-Fi The Comic Frontier" and "Do You think I'm Xexy" before finishing with "The World According to Geek" (with 'The Lord of The Root - One Geek To Rule Them All', the two good looking woman who don't shy away from maths and the Barbie 'DotCom Rescue' CD-ROM game)
If you go to Joy Of Tech you can grab a copy from the authors that has been signed (you even get a chance to ask for a custom inscription) and for an extra fee Nitrozac will even bless your book and attach a lucky sticker. You could go to the O'Reilly page, but since they don't have example cartoons and I don't imagine a cartoon book will ever have errata there isn't much point.
It's not easy to review a cartoon book. Suffice to say that I found the 'toons in this book to be a good variety from amusing through to funny with some that are just a little too true to make me do more than groan. If you've never come across this pair then check out the site and if you like the last few examples then the book will not disappoint(...)

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All quiet in Wallyville...Review Date: 2004-03-05
While one of the most cult characters in the Dilbert series (Wally) gains even more of the spotlight other equally legendary characters like Ratbert but above all Dogbert himself keep getting lesser and lesser appearances. That's a pity actually as especially these two have offered unforgettable moments in the past. Another thing connected with these two fading somewhat is that we get fewer moments of Dilbert at home and more in the office. Tha creates somewhat of an imbalance which was not present in the initial installments of the series.
All in all though, this gets adequately compensated by Adam's invincible humor and the introduction of new characters who might have less of a lifespan in comparison to Ratbert and Dogbert but who provide for some freshness nevertheless.
Other than that it's Wally galore to the max. Wally has been the secret ace
of this comic all along. This is cynicism at its very best and its most hardcore. The lines coming out of Wally's mouth are
surreal.
The Dilbert series continues to be a classic.
STILL THE MOST CONSISTENTLT FUNNY STRIPReview Date: 2004-12-28
The title of this book says it all...who hasn't wanted to smack the person reviewing us upside the head and ask them what the hell were they thinking when they wrote it. Reviews, marketing, computers, stupid bosses...it's all to be read and mocked in Scott's latest collection.
The best get betterReview Date: 2005-04-19
Another funny Dilbert bookReview Date: 2004-03-05
What's funny is the resonant note that Dilbert has struck with so much of corporate America. Having been an employee at a major Fortune 500 company for many years myself, I was convinced that Adams was talking about my company, and so did everyone else, although the resemblances at times could be almost eerie.
Adams's cartoons of the more absurd and ridiculous aspects of corporate culture (which at times seems to be about 99% of it) continue to provide much needed comic relief for hapless cubicle dwellers everywhere, and this is another funny book from Adams that shouldn't disappoint his fans.
One of the funniest Dilbert booksReview Date: 2004-02-28
Toxic Tom
Dilbert as a sheep
Wally being lasy a usual
Dogbert's
Tech Support
The Consultick
Dilbert's mood altering drugs
The furniture psychic
The new dress code which is barrels
My favorite comic which is the one where Wally researches Greek names for a new product
This are a bunch of really great comics and they are a must buy for all Dilbert fans.


Another Gem!Review Date: 2004-01-20
Excellent!Review Date: 2004-01-15
A week into the new year and already satisified!Review Date: 2004-01-09
I've still got 2003 wallpapered all over my cube... guess it's time to start making room for this year. I give it 4 stars. (Only Farside has made me laugh more)
Elbonia Is Not That Far AwayReview Date: 2003-12-31
Scott Adams has created a world all-too-familiar to us who delve into cubicles for employment. Laughing at his cartoons hurts a little because we work for bosses like the pointy hair guy. We know consultants like Dogbert, and Elbonia reminds of too many clients.
Planting this calendar in your cube is a safe way to say to your boss, "I'm on to you." It might not change the inefficient culture of overwork for not clear goal, but you'll feel better in the process.
I fully recommend the Dilbert daily calendar. It is fun, and unlike a monthly calendar, you get a new panel everyday. It stays fresh this way.
Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com
The 2003 Calendar was great!Review Date: 2003-11-23

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great dilbert bookReview Date: 2008-07-08
More Dilbert funReview Date: 2008-06-26
The latest in a string of hitsReview Date: 2008-08-17
Scott Adams Is A Creative GeniusReview Date: 2008-07-02
Adams - As Sharp & Funny as Ever!Review Date: 2008-07-01

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great way to keep track of your lifeReview Date: 2008-09-21
If you laugh, you have to ask yourself, "How twisted am I?"Review Date: 2008-05-23
There are a number of people who try to imitate Andy Riley's bunny suicide comics, and they sometimes come out all wrong. For example, they tend to show the death of the bunny. This is unfortunate, because the joke is in the reader's mind, trying to figure what the bunny is thinking and how the suicide will work, not showing the reader the gruesome death.
People with a dark sense of humor will enjoy this calendar, and judging from the way it has been out of stock at bookstores and is nearly out of stock on Amazon, there are a lot of us out there.
What I WantedReview Date: 2008-01-08
Only for the truly sick and twisted!Review Date: 2008-01-02
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