It's Obvious You Won't Survive by Your Wits Alone - First Signed with a Drawing

Product Code: 73159
It's Obvious You Won't Survive by Your Wits Alone - First Signed with a Drawing
It's Obvious You Won't Survive by Your Wits Alone - First Signed with a Drawing

It's Obvious You Won't Survive by Your Wits Alone - First Signed with a Drawing

Product Code: 73159
Regular price $50.00
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A pristine first printing signed by the artist with a drawing of Dogbert.

An oversize Dilbert strip compilation dailies and Sundays, Sundays in color. Out of print.

From the publisher:

"Adams scrapes his pen across the fears and absurdities of an age we entered when we weren't paying attention-the age of the bureaucratic vacuum." Dilbert is the Everyman in the down-sized, techno-centered workplace. He's the corporately innocent engineer who experiences the absurdities and oddities of office life from his (sometimes shrinking) cubicle. Complemented by his sarcastic and power-hungry dog, Dogbert (aspiring Supreme Ruler of the Earth whose secret happiness is "High expectations and your own bag of chips"), Dilbert provides humor on one of life's most insidious subjects: work. It's Obvious You Won't Survive by Your Wits Alone features nearly two years of Dilbert comic strips (including Sunday cartoons!) that have never appeared in book form.

Scott Adams' reputation suffered in his later years, but throughout the nineties, his mordant workplace comic strip was consistently funny, resonated with any employee and was hugely popular.

While working at Pacific Bell, devoting time to building a new career, Adams woke up every day at 4 a.m. and spent time on various endeavors; cartooning proved to be the most successful of them. In 1989, while still employed at Pacific Bell, Adams launched Dilbert with United Media. The workplace strip gained popularity. It was syndicated in 100 newspapers in 1991 and 400 by 1994.

Adams's success grew, and he became a full-time cartoonist as Dilbert reached 800 newspapers. In 1997, Adams won the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben Award for Outstanding Cartoonist and Best Newspaper Comic Strip. By 2000, the comic was in 2,000 newspapers in 57 countries and 19 languages.

His comic strips were adapted as an animated television series, which premiered in January 1999 and ran for two seasons on UPN. Adams served as executive producer and showrunner, along with Seinfeld writer Larry Charles. The show earned a Primetime Emmy Award in 1999.

Adams, Scott

Condition & Attributes

Very Fine

Publishing Information

Kansas City
Andrews & McMeel
1995
1st

Physical Description

11 inches
8.5 inches
256 pages
color and black & white illustrations throughout
softcover
wraps
English

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