Synopses & Reviews
What do your colleagues, overlords, underlings, clients, and customers have in common? Not knowing how much they annoy you. Not to mention how much you may be annoying them. The route from cubicle to corner office is strewn with etiquette landmines. And now that the boundaries that once cleanly separated work from personal life are blurred, even polite people don't recognize the difference between professional and social manners.
Review
"Intrepid, practical, and always humane, Miss Manners tackles common workplace hazards: irritating colleagues, rude customers, business travel, and office parties, which she'd prefer to see replaced by 'genuine workplace treats such as bonuses and time off.'" Publishers Weekly
Review
"As they parse delicate questions of hierarchy, privacy, focus, gender, age, family matters, illness, gossip, rants, business trips, meetings, and socializing, the Martins broach the very core of human relationships. They also drive home the fact that our lives would be vastly improved if we consistently worked together with dignity, respect, responsibility, patience, and, as they so ably demonstrate, a sense of humor." Booklist
Review
"[H]umorous yet helpful advice... an enjoyable collection." Library Journal
Review
"Witty. . . . The business world would run much more smoothly if everyone lived by Miss Manners's rules of etiquette." New York Times Book Review
Review
"[Judith Martin] is an extremely useful philosopher, and I consult her frequently, in order to behave better." Daniel Handler
Synopsis
"Both a sad and hilarious commentary on the state of the modern workplace."--
About the Author
Judith Martin, born a perfect lady in an imperfect society, is the author of the "Miss Manners" columns and best-selling books, two novels, and a travel book on Venice. She and her husband live in Washington, DC.Nicholas Ivor Martin, who wrote The DaCapo Opera Manual, worked at the White House and was publisher of the Washington Monthly before becoming director of operations at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. He lives in Chicago with his wife and daughter.