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(Hardcover)
With publication of The Religion War, millions of long-time fans of Scott Adams's Dilbert cartoons and business best sellers will have to admit that the literary world is a better place with Adams on the loose spreading new ideas and philosophical conundrums. Unlike God's Debris, principally a dialogue between its two main characters, The Religion War is set several decades in the future when the smartest man in the world steps between international leaders to see if he can prevent a catastrophic confrontation between Christianity and Islam that would destroy most of civilization. The parallels between where we are today and where we could be in the near future are clear.Adams says The Religion War targets "bright readers with short attention spans-everyone from lazy students to busy book clubs." The book may be a three-hour read, but it's packed with concepts that will be discussed long after the last page is turned, including a list of "Questions to Ponder in the Shower" that will underline the story's purpose of highlighting the most important-yet most ignored-questions in the world.
Before his comic creation Dilbert rose to fame as the champion of disgruntled office drones everywhere, Scott Adams was a lowly cube-dweller himself, toiling away at a string of thankless, low-paying corporate jobs. With the success of a franchise that includes dozens of books, as well as calendars, video games, and associated Dilbert-themed merchandise, it’s safe to say Adams won’t have to go back to the office grind anytime soon.
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January 23, 2007: This book was a little slow to entice while the first two chapters predominately explicate a war between Christian and Muslim forces. But 'hang in there' because another war - an intellectual battle between faith and reason - runs parallel and dominates the rest of the book with philosophical bantering in the hallmark style of 'God's Debris.' This book is full of complex ideas and concepts that are creatively and discretely interwoven throughout - like in 'God's Debris' but to a lesser extent. I believe the underlying message deals with problems that can and often do arise when people fail to communicate or think. Adam's conveyed this message in a clever and delightful way. Although his solutions to these real-life problems are so overly simplified they appear to be completely unreaslistic, this was obviously the ironic intent. With humor, wit and wisdom and a silly ending borderline ridiculous, Adam's makes child's play out of war and 'The Religion War' a winner.