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Thomas J. Stanley
Dr. Thomas J. Stanley (1944-2015) was the author of six award winning books concentrating on America's wealthy population. His seventh book, Stop Acting Rich, was published in September 2009 by John Wiley and Sons. He began studying the affluent in 1973. Dr. Stanley wrote The Millionaire Next... show more



Dr. Thomas J. Stanley (1944-2015) was the author of six award winning books concentrating on America's wealthy population. His seventh book, Stop Acting Rich, was published in September 2009 by John Wiley and Sons. He began studying the affluent in 1973. Dr. Stanley wrote The Millionaire Next Door, in 1996. Over 2,000,000 copies of this New York Times bestseller have been sold. In 2000, he published The Millionaire Mind, which explored America's financial elite and how they became so. The Millionaire Mind debuted at #2 on the New York Times bestseller list. Dr. Stanley's first book, Marketing to the Affluent, was selected as a top ten outstanding business book in America by the editors of Best of Business Quarterly. The author lived in Atlanta, held a doctorate of business administration from the University of Georgia in Athens and was formerly a professor of marketing at Georgia State University. Visit Dr. Stanley's website at www.thomasjstanley.com for more information.

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JoshLinse
JoshLinse rated it 10 years ago
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 (...
Introverted Bear
Introverted Bear rated it 10 years ago
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...
viim
viim rated it 13 years ago
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.
whithurst
whithurst rated it 15 years ago
It was really interesting, the only thing I didn't really like about it was that it got really repetative.
Kyahgirl
Kyahgirl rated it 15 years ago
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 ...
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