124 Books
See allFirst 4 chapters were good. Then on, it was all survivorship bias based on property flipping and insider trading, which apparently is “financial literacy”
It was an ok book. The data used as examples are very old (1930-40ish) that it is hard to relate to current generation. For ex: The author gives an example that the average Yale graduate salary is $25100 a year. Apparently, it was very high “back then”. Too hard for us to understand the point the author wants to make here.
It could be a great book if the content/data is more up-to-date.
Another “rich dad poor dad” concept but poorly executed. The book reads like a brain dump of grant cordone and not cohesive enough for anyone to take meaningful action
Horrible, horrible and even more horrible. Takes a dig at why Dale Carnegie's book just doesn't cut it in almost every chapter.
The book is full of insincere recommendations which will backfire on you (unless, perhaps you are a alpha male or a blonde white female)
The author seems to not understand anything about other cultures and keep referring Japan to “Asia” while exemplifies English speaking world as vast with lots of cultural differences. Differences so vast that somebody she met couldn't understand that she wanted a sofa (should have been called a pop)
She also claims that Japanese people take their lives to save faces. I think she is referring to seppuku, which was a tradition in 12th - 16th century
Horrible. This book is not about subconscious mind. Replace the word, “Sub-concious mind” with, god/jesus/whatever and this book will read like a perfect religious book. Avoid at all costs