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Your New Job Title Is "Accomplice"

ebook
"Dilbert and his cubicle cohorts continue churning out the laughs . . . Their latest shenanigans are sure to brighten a dreary workday." —Baton Rouge Advocate
As fresh a look at the inanity of office life as it brought to the comics pages when it first appeared in 1989, this fortieth Dilbert collection comically confirms to the working public that we all really know what's going on. Our devices might be more sophisticated, our software and apps might be more plentiful, but when it gets down to interactions between the worker bees and the clueless in-controls, discontent and sarcasm rule, as only Dilbert can proclaim.
"Once every decade, America is gifted with an angst-ridden anti-hero, a Nietzschean nebbish, an us-against-the-universe everyperson around whom our insecurities collect like iron shavings to a magnet. Charlie Chaplin. Dagwood Bumstead. Charlie Brown. Cathy. Now, Dilbert." —The Miami Herald
"Confined to their cubicles in a company run by idiot bosses, Dilbert and his white-collar colleagues make the dronelike world of Kafka seem congenial." —The New York Times

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Series: Dilbert Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing

OverDrive Read

  • ISBN: 9781449432775
  • Release date: May 24, 2022

EPUB ebook

  • ISBN: 9781449432775
  • File size: 91110 KB
  • Release date: May 24, 2022

Formats

OverDrive Read
EPUB ebook

Languages

English

"Dilbert and his cubicle cohorts continue churning out the laughs . . . Their latest shenanigans are sure to brighten a dreary workday." —Baton Rouge Advocate
As fresh a look at the inanity of office life as it brought to the comics pages when it first appeared in 1989, this fortieth Dilbert collection comically confirms to the working public that we all really know what's going on. Our devices might be more sophisticated, our software and apps might be more plentiful, but when it gets down to interactions between the worker bees and the clueless in-controls, discontent and sarcasm rule, as only Dilbert can proclaim.
"Once every decade, America is gifted with an angst-ridden anti-hero, a Nietzschean nebbish, an us-against-the-universe everyperson around whom our insecurities collect like iron shavings to a magnet. Charlie Chaplin. Dagwood Bumstead. Charlie Brown. Cathy. Now, Dilbert." —The Miami Herald
"Confined to their cubicles in a company run by idiot bosses, Dilbert and his white-collar colleagues make the dronelike world of Kafka seem congenial." —The New York Times

Expand title description text