What compels us take jobs at a desk in an unadorned cubicle doing tasks that are completely pointless and irritating? If you want the answer to that, this is the wrong book. If you want to survive your tenure of ‘working for the man,’ well, this book might help you out.
Working For the Man: Inspiring and Subversive Projects for Residents of Cubicle Land was written by Jeffrey Yamaguchi, a devious and bored man who's created a website complementary to his earlier book, 52 Projects. Writing Working was obviously therapeutic for Mr. Yamaguchi. He took the vengeful, playful, spiteful and delightful ideas brewing in his slightly-off mind and breathed a quasi-life into them by committing them to writing. It was therapeutic for him, entertaining for us.
Some of the projects include: writing your novel on the clock. This is a classic idea to which Yamaguchi adds some clever nuances. I loved the suggestion about spreading your work (your novel, that is) all over your desk so you seem to be a dedicated employee. I totally agree with the suggestion to do your novel writing first thing in the morning, right when you sit down at your desk, before the life has been sucked out of you.
His techniques for meeting survival were humorous. I have used the 'Replay Classic Movies in Your Head' technique during some of my meetings. Of course, I’ve also just blatantly slept.
There are also some lame ideas, like the suggested conversations to have in an elevator. Discussing how many meatballs should be included in a spaghetti and meatball dinner just makes you look foolish, not devilishly spiteful.
It’s a well organized tome and the first third of the book will certainly keep you engaged, likely even laughing in a subdued manner (face it, reading this book anywhere else but at work would be morally wrong, so your laughter must be subdued). But you may start to lose interest.








Article comments
1 - Natalie Bennett
This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net , which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States, and to Boston.com. Nice work!