Twenty-one Dog Years: Doing Time at Amazon.com
By (Author) Mike Daisey
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
23rd August 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Retail and wholesale industries
Internet guides and online services
Publishing and book trade
380.14500202854678
Paperback
240
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 14mm
191g
A Michael Moore for the Dot.com generation, 21 Dog Years is Mike Daiseys wickedly funny story of life in the New Economy trenches.
In 1998, when Amazon.com went to temp agencies to recruit people, they gave them a simple directive: send us your freaks. Thus began Mike Daisey's love affair with the worlds biggest bookstore.
Mike Daisey worked at Amazon.com for nearly three years during the dot-com frenzy of the late nineties. Now that his nondisclosure agreement has expired, he can tell the real story of tech culture, hero worship, cat litter, Albanian economics, venture capitalism that feed into the delusional cocktail exulted as the New Economy.
His ascent from lowly temp to customer service representative to business development hustler is the stuff of dreams and nightmares. No wonder Newsweek has dubbed Daisey the oracle of the bust.
With a hugely popular website mikedaisey.com and a hit one-man show that has received phenomenal coverage (with stories in Wired, Daily Mail, Salon, Guardian and elsewhere), Michael Daisey has been called the first dot.comic and the Michael Moore of the net generation.
Review for 21 Dog Years the performance
Between Spalding Gray and Robin Williams. New York Post
He doesn't pull punches. Daiseyhas wreaked his own brand of havoc. Washington Post
"Mike Daisey does what Michael Moore once did for General Motors." Entertainment Weekly
Dilbert meets Spalding Gray. Hilarity ensues." Business 2.0
"We haven't seen the show, but we hear it's quite funny." Patty Smith, Amazon spokesperson
"It was like, what's nextlocusts" Jeff Bezos, Newsweek
At 24, Mike Daisey joined one of the leading dotcoms in the US. He left in 2000, when he was 27. He has since been been a highly-acclaimed stand up comedian, planning to come to the UK in 2002, and campaigner for the rights of dotcom workers. He lives with his wife in Brooklyn.