by Thomas J. Stanley
This book is unlike any I've ever read. First off, it's not traditionally written. This book does not have a plot or even a set of characters. It's a summary of 20 years of studying millionaires and their work ethics/spending habits. In this novel, you are either a Prodigious Accumulator of Wealth (...
Let me summarize the book and spare you the misery: Millionaires tend to be entrepreneurs who save and invest money. They tend to buy "low-class" items instead of "high-class" items, i.e., Fords instead Rolls-Royce cars. Ok, done.I don't like this book because it's very repetitive. Every chapter bas...
Live beneath your means, and aim to get a job that pays really well.Advice you've heard before from your parents, but never believed it until you were in your mid-twenties and wishing you'd taken up a more profitable degree.
It was really interesting, the only thing I didn't really like about it was that it got really repetative.
I can't believe I forgot to review this book. I was just recommending it to a friend and realized it wasn't on my shelves. I read this book after seeing it recommended on several financial education blogs. People touted it as a good fundamental book on the 'thinking' around wealth. Its written by ...