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HomeBooksHumorDilbertPositive Attitude: A Dilbert Collection (Dilbert Books (Paperback Andrews McMeel)) |
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| Customer Reviews: | | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Dilbert - so true it hurts! Sep 30, 2008 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 Apr 05, 2008 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 Feb 16, 2008 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.
positive attitude Dec 26, 2007 #29 in his series of comic strips which are compiled into a book; cover a period of 40 weeks.
If you want to get all his comic strips, this is the way to do it.
5 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Die hard fans: get it! New readers: don't start here! Nov 24, 2007 I am a long time fan of Adam's descriptions of Dilbert and co-workers' exploits. I own more than 10 Dilbert books and the recent ones, while good, are not the best. I never laughed harder than from Casual Day has Gone too Far and Still Pumped from Using the Mouse, and every subsequent Dilbert book gets measured against that. The earlier ones are worthy just for leading up to the pinnacle, and are interesting for spotting the budding genius of the later installments.
I think the Dilbert series as a whole holds its own still, and for sarcasm, it is one of the best. Something similar, although much darker, is Red Meat, which I also recommend.
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