Chi ha spostato il mio formaggio?

Chi ha spostato il mio formaggio?

Spencer Johnson

3.87
512,453 valutazioni·19,350 recensioni

"Chi ha spostato il mio formaggio?" è una parabola semplice che rivela verità profonde. È una storia divertente e illuminante di quattro personaggi che vivono in un "Labirinto" e cercano il "Formaggio" per nutrirsi e trovare la felicità. Due sono topi di nome Nasofino e Trottolino. E due sono "Omini...

pagine
98
Format
Hardcover
Pubblicato
2002-01-01
Editore
Vermilion
ISBN
9780091883768

Sull'autore

Spencer Johnson
Spencer Johnson

1000 libri · 0 follower

Librarian’s note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.Patrick Spencer Johnson was an American writer. He was known for the ValueTales series of children's books, and for his 1998 self-help book Who Moved My Cheese?, which recurred on the New York Times Bestseller list, on the Publishe...

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Recensioni della comunità

19,350 recensioni
3.9
512,453 valutazioni
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Salwa Marwan
Salwa Marwan·7 months ago
الكتاب قصير جدًا، تقريبًا ساعة وتخلّصه، وأسلوبه سهل وسلس، زي ما تكون بتحكي مع صاحبك. عجبني إنه بيخليك تفكر في مواقفك الشخصية من غير ما يحسسك إنه بيديك محاضرة. بس لو بتدور على حاجة عميقة أوي، ممكن تحس إنه سطحي شوية. ينفع جدًا للي عايز دفعة إيجابية أو محتاج يتعامل مع تغييرات في شغله أو حياته. كتاب زي العسل، بس مش هيغير الدنيا القصة عبارة عن رحلة رمزية عن التغيير في الحياة، بيحكي عن أربع شخصيات (فأرين وإنسانين صغيرين) في متاهة بيدوروا على الجبن، اللي هو رمز للنجاح أو السعادة. الكتاب بيوصّل فكرة إن ...
Federico DN
Federico DN·3 years ago
Make it pizza. Two mice, Sniff and Scurry, and two little people, Haw and Hem, are enjoying a perfect blissful life, until one day someone moves their Cheese. Oh no! What will become of them now???A nice allegorical story about embracing change.I think this could’ve been a lovelier 4 star message if it would’ve been just a tad less allegorical and repetitive; and the ending far less corporate.The movie clip is perfect adaptation. Right to the point, 15 min, without all the excessive repetition...
Archit
Archit·9 years ago
Change or get run over !A great many people have recommended this particular one to me; I did not read.We might be the most evolved species on the planet but sometimes we do over-process. Adapting and forecasting change lurking around the corner is mark of sheer greatness.The best quote perhaps was curbing the wrong interpretations that might be drawn out : that you should try behaving in a new way in the same relationship. Do not change the person but innovate your habits. If you love your part...
Liong
Liong·12 years ago
It is a short storybook, offering an educational tale about two mice 🐭 and two tiny humans navigating a maze in search of cheese. 🧀

Key Lessons I learned from this book: 🔑

1. Change happens whether we like it or not.

2. It’s important to anticipate and accept change.

3. Being flexible and proactive helps us find new opportunities.

4. Staying stuck in the past leads to frustration.

Moral of the story: We must adapt to change in life to remain happy and successful. 🎯
Tony
Tony·17 years ago
It requires a unique sort of demonic skill to take the utterly obvious, lather it with sentimentality, turn it into an animal story, give it a big font and wide margins so that what really ought to be a pamphlet handed out for free on subways becomes instead a "book," and then expect businesspeople to buy it.

Which they did. God help us all.
Kate
Kate·17 years ago
This is a book about victimized lower and middle class mice trapped in a corporate capitalist maze, forced by The Man to scurry around, looking for "The Cheese" (salary, 401K, maybe even decent PPO or HMO). Then The Man (maybe Boeing, maybe American Airlines, maybe Monsanto--whoever) MOVES THE CHEESE because it interferes with his quarterly earnings reports or THE CHEESE will be more cost effective if it is shipped to China or Rwanda where labor is cheaper. So what are the mice supposed to do? A...
Amy
Amy·17 years ago
For years I have managed to avoid reading the popular book Who Moved My Cheese? However, it was recently recommended to me because I mentioned that I'm not especially enthusiastic about change.I wish I could un-read this book. I thought it was overly simplistic and rather insulting to any intelligent person. This book contains such clever little proverbs as "He was happy when he wasn't being run by his fears" (in other words, just stop being afraid, and you'll be happy). Ok, good, I'll try that ...
Ben Briggs
Ben Briggs·18 years ago
Silly little self promoting book. First third is a bunch of people sitting around talking about this new silver-bullet omniscient business book that changed their lives. Middle third is this fairy tale that I can sum up in five (5) words: SHIT HAPPENS, GET OVER IT. And finally the most insulting part is the last third where that group of high-potential future cult followers reassembles and discusses this epiphany of a book that they have read and they all agree to buy copies for all of their fri...
Brian
Brian·18 years ago
You can read this book in about 45 minutes, but it will feel like a week. I think that I would have enjoyed the Spanish version better. I don't speak Spanish.I don't know whether the authors of this book have an employer, but if they do, I would recommend a "random" drug test.This book is about a team of two mice and a team of two minature exectives who each slide into a pair of size 0.005 sneakers and run through a maze in search of cheese. All goes well--until somebody moved the cheese! Chaos ...
Seizure Romero
Seizure Romero·18 years ago
SPOILER ALERT! I am going to save anyone who thinks they need to read this book time & money by summarizing the entire book in the next two sentences: Things change. Learn to adapt.

You're welcome. If you still feel the need to spend money please contact me & I will tell you where to send it.