Product Description: Proving that corporate CEOs are indeed clueless, that PowerPoint presentations are at best perfunctory, and that the Office Nemesis is an omnipresent force to be reckoned with, Dilbert creator Scott Adams offers his 29th comic compilation all in four-color—collecting all cartoons published from June 19, 2006, through March 31, 2007.
Dilbert continues to be the voice for the embattled cubicle-dwelling Everyman. With best-friend Dogbert, and a veritable who's who in accompanying office characters ranging from the Boss and Wally to Alice and Catbert, Dilbert offers a reflective critique of corporate.
Dilbert does it again Another irreverent look at business and coworkers makes this book great for a laugh! If you don't see one of these characters in your office you're just not looking hard enough.
My husband loves these Dilbert collections! I think we've bought every Dilbert and every Calvin & Hobbes collection book available. My husband really loved this Positive Attitude book, and left it on the coffee table for others to flip through and enjoy. Maybe with the economic situation, Scott Adams can make a Dilbert book about being unemployed? Well, maybe that wouldn't be as funny after all.
Dilbert - so true it hurts! This is another great book from Scott Adams. Anyone who has ever worked in a cubicle, been a victim of 'flavor of the month' management strategies, or had a well meaning but misguided superior will enjoy this collection.
Disappointing I am a huge Dilbert fan and have well over a dozen of Scott Adams' Dilbert books and favorite strips taped to my office door. The best part of this book is that the cartoons are all in color. The disappointing part is that the strips just aren't as funny as those in the earlier collections. Few made me laugh out loud. I recommend purchasing some of Scott Adams' earlier books such as Still Pumped from Using the Mouse or Casual Day Has Gone Too Far. They are funnier and used copies are under $4 including shipping.
When you need to scape from and to reality A really nice addition to the Dilbert stuff you can get your hands on. It would seem like in the current state of the corporate world, that having a positive attitude is more like a character flaw. Seeing the situations that Scott Adams describes in this collection of strips is the concentrated dose of reality that one must get before attempt to step to the scorching sunny side of life.