Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Who Moved My Cheese : An Amazing Way to Deal With Change in Your Work and In Your Life

Who Moved My Cheese : An Amazing Way to Deal With Change in Your Work and In Your Life

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 .. 120 >>

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Why is there a "for teens" version? This IS for "Teens"
Review: This book has motivational value. Get on your feet and stop complaining, pick up your bootsraps blah blah blah stuff.

I think people like it cause it can be read and finished while sitting on the toilet. Now they feel motivated cause they actually finished a book albeit a very silly one. I'll guess that's where the value of the book comes in. It has a large base of readers cause it's easy reading.

Giving this book or recommending it should be contrued as an insult. This book is what you'd say to a friend who's down to try and encourage them to move on in life. "Please don't kill yourself, there's a light at the end of the tunnel if you're willing to put on your running shoes..."

Unless you're on the verge of alcoholism and despair and you're willing to give anything but religion a shot, I guess you can try this book. Otherwise just enjoy the quiet time on the porcelain.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I lost my cheese
Review: I was recently downsized and lost my 'cheese'. I really didn't see it coming or refused to see what was happening in my workplace. The story in this book is very childish, but so are most workplaces. More people should read this book with an open mind, it really is good advice. Also check out Rat Race Relaxer: Your Potential & The Maze of Life, it offers advice and stories on living a more fulfilling life and would also make a great corporate gift book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not Swiss
Review: This is definately not swiss cheese. This book has not holes in it. It's solid. It has bits and pieces of other books that I also love. In the sense that it is a parable-ish story with a deeper meaning, it reminds me of the book, The Life Of Pi. And in the sense that the deeper meaning is about personal happiness, it reminds me of the book, The Little Guide To Happiness. All solid reading for personal growth. And for that matter, entertainment. Who moved my cheese is charming, The little Guide To Happiness, is funny and witty, and The Life of Pi is creative and engaging.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An Excuse for Management To Underperform
Review: It's sad that "Who Moved My Cheese" has become as popular as it is. It has proven to be a great excuse for management to be, well... bad. Expect change -- it's bound to happen, for better or worse. Typically it's for the worse.

Interestingly enough, most of the recent reviews have been negative, probably from employees who've been subject to inept management using this inane methodology as a crutch for EVERYTHING.

I guess you could look at this as a good idea that has been used for the wrong purposes -- kind of like nuclear power. Used for the right purposes, it can be a wonderful tool; if placed in the wrong hands, it can be nothing but trouble.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: How can this be?
Review: I think I got through the introduction of this book before I started skimming through to find substance. For anyone thinking of reading this book the summary will nicely do. "Adapt and enjoy life." Without a worthless story about mice that could have been written in a three sentence paragraph and then a poor comparison to over-simplified personas without any real-to-life application this book would be only slightly less meaningless. Go buy some colby and Ritz crackers, you will have a better time. This truely is a business-gift tome of worthless application. If you see it floating around your office, or worse yet, are given it by someone higher up. Beware!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: simplistic, redundant, and overstates the obvious
Review: This could have been half a chapter in most decent books on management and money. Instead you get a "book" (and at this length I use that word loosely) that is a condescending fortune cookie mess. Let me sum it up for you: life is full of hardships and you need to deal with them and move on. There, I have saved you the cost of this book and didn't insult your intelligence while I was at it. Avoid this at all costs.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Change with the Change!
Review: Change with the Change! Yeah, Who moved my Cheese is all about financial resources, Security and Happiness to retain when things go beyond control with waves of Changes spelling alarm at Business, workplace or Life. The control power is 'You' the person and the author conveys the message with a form of fable - four characters, Sniff and Scurry, the mice and two little ppl mouse size humans hem and Haw. Cheese relates to our living ways, our jobs and career paths. With the sea of changes swapping in, one got to change with the change is the flavor of the Book. Like the cheese runs out, new sources need to be looked for and this is a moral booster bringing in awareness and alertness to find solutions to spoonfeed problems. Easy to read with quick glance, the book might provoke thoughts as to dig into lives of people speaking their experiences after the fable is said as they share their ideas and thoughts. However, every individual Business person or CEO at their work levels, face changes n have a scoop of their life, their best sorted principles n ways, the messages in the book serve only as a boost to face Changes. Life is full of obstacles and to deal with them, Dr. Spencer Johnson brings in a theme 'Who moved my cheese' - esp. the best part is the illustrations and the quicky 'quotes' which can be special motivators. No wonder, an upcoming Lecture presented by a reputed newspaper in my town on 'Who moved my cheese' may prove boon to many esp.in times of money crisis. Whatever, All said, its Thinking process to re-charge with renewed faith and this does the trick - Get the Cheese n say 'cheese' - Nice Read!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Oy.
Review: The fact that a certain manager at a former workplace of mine -- far better at schmoozing than telling the truth, not having grown emotionally or intellectually since the age of about 14, and known to have, uh, a little trouble with alcohol -- loooooved this book made me suspect it from the start. If I remember correctly, I gave it a brief flip-through because I couldn't stomach an in-depth reading.

Unlike many of the one-star reviewers, I'm a libertarian, and I do believe that we all need to be ready to adapt to radical changes in how we earn our livings. Like it or not, the anti-globalists and the Luddites aren't going to turn back the tides of freer trade and ever-improving technology. I myself got laid off last month, and although at times I've been downhearted and panicky (my skills could use some major upgrading), I am trying to look at it as an opportunity, not a catastrophe, especially because my most recent job was in an industry with a dwindling future.

That said, all the trees that died to make "Who Moved My Cheese?" would have been better put to use as toilet paper. An author who truly cared about helping others adjust to change would make concrete suggestions on how to do so. Indeed, there are any number of books out there on how to change careers, relationships, self-image, etc. Of course, many of them are hack jobs, but others offer concrete suggestions, sound strategies, and morale-boosters that actually have some intellectual heft to them.

This book, on the other hand, is an exercise in managerial self-congratulation at its most condescending to subordinates. I was disgusted, but not really surprised, to learn that people were receiving it in their layoff packages. Scott ("Dilbert") Adams could hardly come up with a crueler twist on corporate perversity.

Many readers have given this book five stars. Then again, the same holds for those ever-so-deep (think Jack Handey) tomes in the "Chicken Shi--" sorry, "Soup for the Soul" series. I guess a lot of people not only don't mind being spoon-fed the ridiculously obvious and trite, even after it's been dumbed down so that it could be understood by 4-year-olds and then repackaged as priceless wisdom, but will afterwards lick their lips and say, "Thank you, sir, may I have another?"

Any well-written fantasy novel grounded in moral realities -- many recommend Tolkien's books; I myself strongly suggest Diana L. Paxson's trilogy based on the ancient Germanic tale of Sigfried and Brünhilde, starting with "The Wolf and the Raven" -- would get across the message that most of life is the fighting of adversity, and do it with far more haunting, enchanting grace, than a thousand books the likes of "Who Moved My Cheese?"

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Fun Children's Book . . . Or the Idiot's Literary Read
Review: This book is marketed towards those managers who order thousands of copies for their workers: for the purposes of inspiring them to work harder and contribute greater productivity to the firm. However, having a boss give this book to you is a bit of an insult . . . the boss might have well given you the story of the 3 blind mice (with lots of notes written in the margins about how to interpret the silly story).

Now the story is not bad: it's a typical fable that leaves readers creating any moral lesson they can conceive of. Middle-managers will obviously push the metaphor of not giving in to fear, and always being prepared to adapt to a changing environment (i.e. record labels can stop crying and suing Kazaa users for file sharing, and start to initiate a business model like Apple's iTunes).

What is so insulting is the way the book is fashioned. The fable is told within a backdrop of people speaking about their lives. After the fable is told, these people share their thoughts and ideas about it; their conversations seem to reflect the author's doubt that we will actually find a theme within the story. It is as if the author thinks we are too dumb to create a meaningful lesson out of the simple fable. Of course, this narration method allows the author to push his book to the business community. But for the reader, it's insulting having the author spoon-feed his conception of the fable to us.

Even the fable itself is gloriously "self-aware" of its didactic tone. Whole pages are dedicated to one-liners from one of the characters -- the author apparently wants us to memorize these principles (as if the fact that the character having these epiphanies written on the wall doesn't signify that these ideas are important enough).

In summary, it's hard to imagine an adult taking this book seriously. It would serve much better as a bed-time story to a child, rather than assigned reading by your boss. In the case of the former, you could easily read this book in 15 minutes at your bookstore, saving yourself from paying a ridiculously high cover price for this over hyped book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Which one are you?
Review: I read Who Moved My Cheese by Spencer Johnson, M.D. the day it arrived in the mail. As I read each section of the book, I could see myself as each character at one time or another in my life. It was fast reading which was good because I found myself re-reading passages of the book again and again. I plan to tell as many people about this book as I can because it was thought provoking, easy to understand, and believe it or not very realistic (even though I have never seen mice with jogging suits on and shoes around their necks). It was Great!!!


<< 1 .. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 .. 120 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates