Welcome to the Inspector General's office-an empire of oversight where irony isn't a side effect, it's the job description.
In Letters from a Young Inspector, one not-so-na ve data analyst stumbles into a career of global travel, bureaucratic theater, and investigations that read more like satire than government work. From taxpayer-funded "farewell tours" to investigations held together with more PowerPoint than substance, each letter unpacks the absurdity of an organization meant to keep others in check-yet rarely checks itself.
This isn't a tell-all. It's a tell-enough. Names are withheld, faces are blurred, but the stories remain uncomfortably recognizable to anyone who's ever survived a staff meeting, explained a budget shortfall, or watched leadership trip over its own rules.
Equal parts memoir, dark comedy, and cautionary tale, this book is for the watchers-the ones who deliver results, absorb the fallout, and quietly document the nonsense for posterity (or sanity).
So pull up a chair.
The inspector has some letters for you.