A useful read for those interested in finding more satisfaction and happiness in their work, Workplace Zombies is filled with fresh stories from a wide array of workplaces, illustrating the costs and challenges of zombiedom, plus a host of inspiring quotes and original advice (like “three super-quick and easy things you can do to remove uncertainty from the workplace that require no budget”) crafted to inspire happier, more productive workplaces free of the working dead. Dolinsky walks the reader through an eight-step path for defeating the “workplace zombie virus of bureaucratic friction,” with tips from his time as an Army bomb tech, a stockbroker, and a federal emergency management expert peppered throughout.
The abundance of quotes and references to writers, philosophers, and pop culture can distract from the central argument, and the anecdotal approach makes it read less like a guide for inoculating workplaces and more like notes from the front lines. While the zombie metaphor is itself dehumanizing, Dolinsky writes with compassion, giving grace to those who might, in simpler tellings, appear as villains by acknowledging them as victims of this workplace virus. His stories are framed as learning moments rather than indictments, and readers will find wisdom to pull from them.
Takeaway: Thoughtful look at how to end zombie behavior in the workplace.
Comparable Titles: Marina Nitze and Nick Sinai’s Hack Your Bureaucracy, Gary Hamel and Michele Zanini’s Humanocracy.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-