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Dilbert #38

Teamwork Means You Can't Pick the Side That's Right

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He's the icon of millions of corporate workers, the most popular cubicle dweller on this planet. He spends his days in endless meetings with incompetent supervisors, performing perfunctory tasks mixed with the occasional team-building, brainstorming, or management fad-of-the-day session. He has entertained us for more than two He's Dilbert.

Created in 1989 by Adams, in his own cubicle as a doodle distraction, Dilbert has found a home in the workplace, this generation's home away from home. Adams amuses readers with his portrayal of the absurdities of this environment with unfailing accuracy and precision. As readers of more than 2,000 newspapers, millions of books, and the newly revamped Dilbert site know, the familiar mouthless character with the upturned tie, his dog, Dogbert, the pointy-haired Boss, over-achieving Alice and underachieving Wally, Human Resources director Catbert, depict a world that's all too easy to recognize, complete with shrinking cubicles, clueless co-workers, focus groups and ill-conceived management concepts.

In this all-new chronological collection, Adams further exploits the fodder of workaday life, making even the most cynical cubicle dweller laugh at our shared, absurd work lives.

128 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 17, 2012

44 people are currently reading
112 people want to read

About the author

Scott Adams

240 books1,309 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name. See this thread for more information.

Scott Adams was a defining voice of the American white-collar experience who transitioned from a prominent cartoonist into a polarizing political commentator. After earning an MBA from UC Berkeley and spending years in management at Pacific Bell, Adams launched the comic strip Dilbert in 1989. The strip’s sharp satire of corporate bureaucracy and the "Dilbert Principle"—the idea that incompetent employees are promoted to management to minimize their damage—resonated globally, eventually appearing in 2,000 newspapers and winning the prestigious Reuben Award. Beyond the funny pages, Adams explored philosophy and persuasion in works like God's Debris and Win Bigly, the latter of which analyzed Donald Trump’s rhetorical strategies during the 2016 election. His career took a dramatic turn during the mid-2010s as he shifted focus to his daily "Real Coffee" livestream, where he combined his background in hypnosis and corporate strategy to comment on the "culture wars." This period of independent commentary culminated in 2023 when he reacted to a poll regarding racial tensions with a series of inflammatory remarks. Labeling Black Americans a "hate group" and advocating for racial segregation, Adams faced immediate and widespread repercussions; hundreds of newspapers dropped his strip, and his publisher canceled his upcoming projects. Undeterred, he moved his work to the subscription-based platform Locals, rebranding his comic as Dilbert Reborn. In his final years, he faced severe health challenges, including stage IV prostate cancer and vocal cord issues, yet he remained a prolific presence on social media. He eventually announced the end of his hand-drawn work due to focal dystonia but continued to direct the strip's vision. Adams’s legacy remains a complex study in the power of branding, the evolution of digital influence, and the volatile intersection of creative genius and political provocation in the modern era.

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5 stars
111 (36%)
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116 (37%)
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62 (20%)
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Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for Benjamin Uke.
647 reviews51 followers
June 12, 2024
A collection of "Dilbert" comic strips from February 13, 2011 to November 20, 2011 from before the cartoonists career imploded, relatively funny.
It aged well enough.
Profile Image for Петър Стойков.
Author 2 books333 followers
February 5, 2020
Последната книга на Скот Адамс е много добра, но той всъщност печели известност и богатство с карикатурите за Дилбърт. Настоящата книга е сбор от такива карикатури, свързани, поне според съставителя, със сътрудничеството в офисната обстановка.

Прочетох половината стрипове и не се засмях нито на един, нито пък намерих нещо остроумно или описващо по забавен начин работата в офис. Честно, не знам аз ли не съм целевата аудитория на тоя тип хумор (въпреки, че 10 г. съм работил в офис), или разликата между американската и българската офисна култура е толкова голяма, или пък тия комикси са остарели вече...
Profile Image for Tim Robinson.
1,160 reviews57 followers
May 22, 2022
No real genius in this collection, but still good for a chuckle.
Profile Image for Dominick.
Author 16 books33 followers
April 4, 2013
There's not much point in reviewing Dilbert books, really, since they're all pretty much the same. If you like one, you'll like the others, more or less, and I like them. Lots of snarky, anti-bureaucratic humour, rendered simply. Rarely memorable but usually amusing.
Profile Image for Joseph Young.
921 reviews11 followers
March 20, 2019
Somehow, not as funny as Dilbert once was. There is a pronounced lack of good story arcs, and I only laughed a few times: small chuckles, not bursting ones like with other volumes. Maybe the work seems stale, less witty? If anything, Dilbert has become dumber and more antisocial, Wally has become more one track, the women are dumber... Even Dogbert seems to be phoning it in with his schemes. Am just missing the sense of connection in this volume. Any facade of Dilbert's optimism is gone, and that makes him a more boring 2d facsimile of what he used to be.
Profile Image for SKP.
1,285 reviews
June 11, 2023
I read all of the Dilbert books that I can get my hands on! I think they are hilarious, and anyone who has had a job in a corporate setting especially can relate to them. I always get a kick out of them!
344 reviews
January 13, 2025
A great read for anyone working in an office

Training manual
I recently went through some training at work then read this book. Yep! This is a great training manual for those trying to survive or thrive in corporate America.
2,189 reviews23 followers
October 28, 2022
A fun but still relevant collection of Dilbert cartoons to amuse the modern worker.
Profile Image for Pat.
404 reviews2 followers
November 14, 2022
it’s Dilbert

What more need one say. Thoroughly enjoyable as always. Eleven more words are required before I can stop writing, so…
Profile Image for Cale.
3,943 reviews26 followers
July 9, 2014
Dilbert books are always fun quick reads. This is a later collection, and Dilbert seems to be a bit more cynical, but that just adds to the humor. There aren't any long form series here, nothing lasts more than 3-4 strips, but it's as biting as ever (and actually more so in some places - the addition of the company CEO as a fairly common character allows for barbs aimed higher up the company chain). As always, too much of it feels too on point for someone who works within a large corporation. It's not that far from the truth in many ways.
Profile Image for dejah_thoris.
1,357 reviews24 followers
May 26, 2013
A few of these definitely made me giggle but my favorite has to be the upgrade to becoming Toxic Coworkers who only open discussions with topics everyone will fight about or constantly whine about their personal lives. Yup. I hear that one.
Profile Image for Rex Libris.
1,348 reviews3 followers
April 21, 2016
Another very entertaining addition to the Dilbert corpus. My favorite involved someone telling the gang he did digital curation. Dilbert said he did not even know what that was. So the individual mocks Dilbert. When Dilbert asks him to explain what digital curation is, he can't.
Profile Image for Sharakael.
316 reviews6 followers
May 14, 2016
A nice read when you don't feel like thinking too much.
This book feels like an incomplete collection - there were strips that felt like it was part of a longer story arc... wish the entire thing was included.
The book I borrowed from the library was full colour so that was pretty nice.
Profile Image for Dave Jones.
310 reviews2 followers
May 1, 2012
This book would be really, really funny if it wasn't so true!
Profile Image for Marsha Altman.
Author 18 books135 followers
September 16, 2012
He's funnier as an author when he's either more bizarre or he balances the office stuff with other strips. This was too office-heavy.
Profile Image for Kim.
908 reviews25 followers
February 19, 2013
Typical Dilbert humor. Some of the business ling is over my head. Needs more Wally!
Profile Image for Sadie-Jane Huff.
1,955 reviews12 followers
July 16, 2013
scott is always a hoot. u either love dilbert or u dont. Thank goodness I do.
22 reviews2 followers
May 8, 2015
Some of the best

I have many of these on my cubicle wall. This is one of SA's best collections. Scott Adam's has found his skeevy way into my wallet.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

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