Following his 20th anniversary hit, Dilbert 2.0 , Scott Adams returns with another Dilbert collection of funny page favorites inside I'm Tempted to Stop Acting Randomly . Inside this collection, Dilbert and his team "flail around in futility" while the corporate bosses "forget what it's like to be one of the little people." From CEO Dogbert's speculative use of the company jet for personal vacationing to the flawed planning of a new electrically compromised data center, Dilbert exemplifies the randomness and annoyances associated with corporate cubicle culture.
Adams was born in Windham, New York in 1957 and received his Bachelor's degree in Economics from Hartwick College in 1979.
He also studied economics and management for his 1986 MBA from the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley.
In recent years, Adams has been hurt with a series of debilitating health problems. Since late 2004, he has suffered from a reemergence of his focal dystonia which has affected his drawing. He can fool his brain by drawing using a graphics tablet. On December 12, 2005, Adams announced on his blog that he also suffers from spasmodic dysphonia, a condition that causes the vocal cords to behave in an abnormal manner. However, on October 24, 2006, he again blogged stating that he had recovered from this condition, although he is unsure if the recovery is permanent. He claims to have developed a method to work around the disorder and has been able to speak normally since. Also, on January 21, 2007, he posted a blog entry detailing his experiences with treatment by Dr. Morton Cooper.
Adams is also a trained hypnotist, as well as a vegetarian. (Mentioned in, "Dilbert: A Treasury of Sunday Strips 00).
If you have read and enjoyd other Dilbert books, you will probably enjoy this one about the same as them-and vice versa. Dilbert boks are sort of like literary McDonald's--that is not a slur, just a descriptor, as they are all pretty much comparable, and you know what you are going to get, with a little room for variation. There are many funny sequences here--Asok getting a nose that grows when others lie, the boss dying and getting resurrected, etc--but nothing ground-breaking or exceptions. Just entertaining, undemanding comics.
I’m reading my way through as many Dilbert collections as I can get my hands on. I am a big fan —lots of laughing out loud, being able to relate to so much of what goes on even via the little bit of corporate life I’ve experienced. I think anyone who has worked in any sort of office setting can relate to at least some of what you find in a Dilbert book. My only complaint about Dilbert collections overall is that there does not seem to be an agreed-upon order to which collections go in what order. Amazon says one thing, Goodreads another, other sites say something else. Some places have them in more than one series which is especially confusing. Scott Adams needs to fix this so all sites that promote or carry his books agree on what order they go. It would be to his advantage.
This is a good book to read when you need a laugh throughout the day, especially after your manager hands you a project no one can complete. Reading this book reminds me of some of the decisions management has made over the years causing me to question whether I really live in the matrix or not.
Like almost all Dilbert books, this was highly entertaining and very funny. How does it compare to other Dilbert books? Hard to say, but it did seem to have an unusually high percentage of literally laugh-out-loud, "I have to annoy my wife by reading this one aloud to her" strips.
Good color artwork in sequential form. No black and whites. Dilbert and company move thru a corporate world of one illogical choice piled on another. Based off true events.
This Dilbert collection is newer, so the art and humour are different with the times. But surely you must read this to understand the PHB dying and reviving!
As a child I devoured comics and could laugh for hours at collections of the side. Sadly, much like the tilt-a-whirl, growing up has changed my relationship with comics. i still love Dilbert, but I can’t read a book like this in one sitting. Maybe the cubicle has stolen my soul, but i have to pace myself to get maximum laughs from a book like this.
Dilbert and company are openly rebellious and wonderfully snarky in this volume. My favorite story arc involved their pointy haired boss getting stuck in the air ducts of the building. Lots of laughs.
We all might have started out like Calvin with a great view of life. But after hitting the workforce we all somewhat become Dilbert. Everyone knows someone like one of the characters in the strips. Highly recommended
Kurtis loaned this to me. Once upon a time I read each and every Dilbert book, but I fell off that wagon in 1999 or so. I see Scott Adams is up to #35. Wow.