There are actually a couple of different things on the internet called “Shredder” or “What about my shredder?”, but one specific item matches your wording very closely: a short book listed as “What about my shredder?” (sometimes with the subtitle “My personal shredder?”) on Goodreads.

What “What about my shredder?” seems to be

From public catalog listings, “What about my shredder?” is presented as:

  • A short, quirky, autobiographical-style piece.
  • Described as “the riveting autobiographical tale of the crow‑like thing…”, suggesting a very unusual, possibly surreal narrator or persona.
  • Marketed more like an experimental or humorous personal text than a conventional self‑help or fiction book.

Another related item with almost the same title appears on Scribd as a 1‑page self‑improvement style document titled “What About My Shredder?” , which simply repeats the question about the author’s shredder many times without additional context. This looks more like minimalist, repetitive text or a kind of conceptual/novelty piece than a traditional “book.”

How this differs from other “Shredder” books

There are several other “shredder”‑themed books that are not the same as “What about my shredder?”:

  • “Shredder” by Jonathan Kebbe – a children’s book about a class gerbil who can shred anything, and whose antics get a boy named Dino into trouble.
  • “Shredders” by Michael Cole – an adult horror novel about genetically altered, piranha‑like fish that strip people to the bone in a lake-town disaster scenario.
  • “Shredder the Spider Droid” (Beast Quest / Sea Quest universe) – a kids’ fantasy/adventure about a mechanical spider droid that must be defeated by young heroes.

These have clear plots and genres (children’s fiction or horror), while “What about my shredder?” appears to be an odd, autobiographical or conceptual piece centered on the idea or persona of a “shredder” rather than a conventional narrative.

So “what about my shredder book?”

If you’re asking whether your “shredder” book exists or is visible online:

  • A work titled “What about my shredder?” does appear in public book listings (e.g., Goodreads), framed as an autobiographical, crow‑like narrator story.
  • A similarly titled 1‑page text on Scribd repeats the question “What About My Shredder?” many times and is tagged as self‑improvement, but offers no real content beyond the phrase itself.

If you’re the author and wondering “what’s out there” about it, the public footprint right now seems to be:

  • Short catalog descriptions with that “riveting autobiographical tale of the crow-like thing” hook.
  • At least one minimalist or conceptual text version on a document‑sharing site that uses the same title and repetition as its main device.

If you tell me more about your role (author, reader, or just curious) and what you want to know (reviews, how to promote it, whether people are discussing it on forums, etc.), I can tailor more specific, practical advice for you.