Everyone knows Wally--that short quirky guy with little hair, plenty of horn-rimmed frames, and almost zero work ethic. After all, who’s got time for a job, thinks the self-proclaimed "Lord Wally the Puppet Master", when you’re busy surviving the "Mobility Pool", turning your cubicle into a tourist attraction called "Sticky-Note City", and selecting a mail-order bride from Elbonia? Weasel-Boy makes a point of highlighting his poor performance and lack of respect.., and usually gets another raise for his efforts. Such is life in Dilbert and Wally’s world. Such are the laughs in What Would Wally Do?
Everyone knows Wally--that short quirky guy with little hair, plenty of horn-rimmed frames, and almost zero work ethic. After all, who’s got time for a job, thinks the self-proclaimed "Lord Wally the Puppet Master", when you’re busy surviving the "Mobility Pool", turning your cubicle into a tourist attraction called "Sticky-Note City", and selecting a mail-order bride from Elbonia? Weasel-Boy makes a point of highlighting his poor performance and lack of respect.., and usually gets another raise for his efforts. Such is life in Dilbert and Wally’s world. Such are the laughs in What Would Wally Do?
When it became syndicated in 1989, Dilbert struck a chord with workers everywhere. Fans of the strip saw life on the job as they knew it, with all the absurdity, craziness, and dry humour that underlies any living, breathing organization.
Now work life seems downright unimaginable without Dilbert and Dogbert’s take on everything from management ill-practices to nonperformance reviews. What Would Wally Do? is the twenty-seventh Dilbert book, delivering that same combination of pain and humour that readers count on. This collection especially highlights Wally, Dilbert’s colleague, fellow engineer, foil and fool.