Fugitive from the cubicle police

by Scott Adams

1998

Publication

London : Boxtree, c1998.

Collection

Status

Available

Description

An insider's look into the business office finds Dilbert and his colleagues facing the absurdities of corporate life and management incompetence.

User reviews

LibraryThing member readafew
Dilbert, one of the funniest (because it's true) comics of all time. I would like to have the full collection of the comics. Maybe he could start by making a book of the first 5-6 years of Dilbert like the Farside or Calvin & Hobbs.
LibraryThing member StormRaven
The eighth collection of Dilbert comics, Fugitive from the Cubicle Police contains many classic strips and story lines from Adams' ongoing vicious skewering of the inane and idiotic realm of the modern office. The name of this volume derives from a series of strips in which Dilbert is plagued by an
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enforcer of cubicle regulations. In the original version, he titled this enforcer the "Cubicle Gestapo", but the editors of the strip made him change it to the slightly less offensive "Cubicle Police". Oddly, despite the fact that the title of this volume uses the revised version, the strips in the book use the original "Gestapo" moniker (even the strip on the back cover of the book uses "Gestapo" instead of "Police").

In any event, this book contains Dilbert at its best. Though there are fewer ongoing story lines than in many other comic strips (a fact that Adams somewhat references in an aborted series in this volume involving genetically engineered cucumber warriors), the themes contained in the Dilbert strip are all ongoing. Basically almost everything boils down to one of two categories: poking fun at Dilbert and other technical types for their lack of social skills, or (more commonly) poking fun at the stupidity of the cubicle driven world in which people who don't understand the products their company makes are supposed to manage those that do.

Dogbert is heavily featured in this volume, as is Ratbert. Early in the book Dogbert bullies his way into a job and a promotion at the firm where Dilbert works, eventually making millions in stock options and retirement benefits. He and Ratbert take up consulting, offering their outrageously overpriced services to the company in such areas as corporate fitness, technical support, and downsizing. Ratbert straps liver to his waist to serve as evidence of extra brains. As a lawyer, this volume contains my favorite strip in which Dogbert tries to decide whether building an army or starting a religion is the best way to conquer the world. When calculating which way would involve the least loss of life, he counts law students as two-tenths of a person, on the grounds that they won't drop to zero until they pass the bar.

The strips in this volume also take a slightly violent turn - Dogbert acquires a phaser to punish those who annoy him, while a secretary begins to shoot her coworkers with a crossbow. Phil of Insufficient Light makes several appearances to punish those guilty of minor errors by darning them to heck. Of course, the pointy-haired boss doesn't need to resort to such crude methods to inflict pain, firing individuals with abandon, reassigning them to new cubicles on a whim, cutting budgets, and changing projects specs he doesn't understand (which means all of them).

Unusually for Dilbert, who usually has no success in his personal life, things seem to pick up a little for him in this volume. Although there are numerous strips depicting the many ways an engineer can have a date go completely awry, in this volume Dilbert acquires his girlfriend Liz, a woman attracted to men who can write code in short sleeved polyester shirts. (Dilbert also experiments with cologne that makes him irresistible to women, with humorous results). The strips with Dilbert and Liz are funny as Dilbert confronts a woman who is just as nerdy as he is.

Still, it is the work-related strips that make Dilbert what it is. Over and over again Adams shows that he can take the painful reality of business jargon laden meetings about nothing at all, power point presentations with no content of any kind, and corporate rules that make no sense and turn them into humor that is all the more funny because it is so depressingly true. This volume is no exception: from Dogbert declaring himself the patron saint of technology to drive out stupidity, to dog collar trackers for employees, to "Harfurd" educated bosses, every page is classic bitterly satirical Dilbert.
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LibraryThing member iayork
Hey! We all brought bananas again: Calling Scott Adams a cynic is a true application of the word, but will not justify his work alone. He does it in a matter that is not undermining or condescending. His drawings are mediocre at best, but his ideas are superb. Here is an artist who chooses concept
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over form. Good, funny, amusing stuff.
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LibraryThing member IllanoyGal
More good cartoons about life in the corporate culture.
LibraryThing member ThothJ
Always funny. Too funny for my mere words to explain.
LibraryThing member ThothJ
Always funny. Too funny for my mere words to explain.
LibraryThing member ThothJ
Always funny. Too funny for my mere words to explain.
LibraryThing member ThothJ
Always funny. Too funny for my mere words to explain.
LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
In small doses, very funny. A few strips definitely deserve permanent mounting on cubical walls. But to read a whole book in just a few days is exhausting and soul-sucking, even for a person who has never worked in a similar environment. If I were trapped in such a situation, it seems to me that
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this would be actually even more depressing - it would point out the futility of hope for anything better.
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Language

ISBN

075222431X / 9780752224312

Original publication date

1996
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