by Robert T. Kiyosaki, Sharon L. Lechter
If you can get past the gimmick (and allegedly non-existent “rich dad”) in Rich Dad Poor Dad this book actually has a pretty strong premise. With his book Kiyosaki sets out to change the way you view money: what it means to you, how you deal with it, and how you should put it to work for you instead...
This is one of my favorite finance books.
This is one of my favorite finance books.
I liked the content (that's what the two stars are for), but the format is absolutely bollocks. Ironically, the author writes about himself in this book `I'm a best-selling author, not a best-writing author'. I must agree.His ideas on financial intelligence seem to make sense, and repetition is the ...
I do wonder if Kiyosaki was as articulate at nine years old as he remembers himself being. Nothing amuses me more than the stilted dialogue of business books, which always reminds me of the dreaded "As you know, Bob..." But is Kiyosaki is happy to point out himself, he's not a great writer -- and he...
From the very start I knew this ugly book was not going to work for me.
When I read this book several years ago, I really liked what it had to say, I just thought I wasn't in a place to do what it said. Now I'm glad. Kiyosaki focuses on real estate. Recently, I found out that his "biographical" approach is fake and the book largely became promoted because of Amway.