In his 19th collection, Dilbert and his power-hungry dog once again provide comic relief to all suppressed and repressed workers.
Dilbert is featured in 2,000 newspapers and is enjoyed by 150 million fans in 65 countries and 19 languages.
B&W illustrations.
When Dilbert first appeared in newspapers across the country in 1989, office workers looked around suspiciously.
Was its creator, Scott Adams, a pen name for someone who worked amongst them? After all, the humor was just too eerily funny and familiar.
Since then, Dilbert has become more than a cartoon character.
He's become an office icon.
In Another Day in Cubicle Paradise Dilbert and his cohorts, Dogbert, Catbert, Ratbert, and the pointy-haired boss, once again entertain with their cubicle humor.
From bizarre personnel decisions to meetings gone bad, from schizoid secretaries to consultants from hell, Another Day in Cubicle Paradise provides a way to get all those darn comic strips off the breakroom bulletin board.