Personal-finance


Related Subjects: Money Book Review 401k 403(b) 457-plan 529-plan-college-savings Credit-card Credit-repair Debit-card Debt-consolidation Education-Savings-Account Employee-stock-option Individual-Retirement-Account Insurance Pension Social-security Wealth
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Book reviews for "Personal-finance" sorted by average review score:

All You Should Know About Ira, Keogh, and Other Retirement Plans
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall Direct (01 January, 1987)
Author: J K Lasser Tax Inst Staff
Amazon base price: $6.95
Used price: $193.50
Collectible price: $3.50

All You Need to Know About Exchange Rates
Published in Paperback by Pan Macmillan (24 August, 1989)
Authors: Howard Flight and Bonita Lee Swan
Amazon base price: $

All Work and No Say¹Ho Hum Another Day: How to Captivate Your Workforce
Published in Paperback by Iconoclast Publishing (01 March, 2004)
Author: Jody Urquart
Amazon base price: $11.20
List price: $14.00 (that's 20% off!)
Buy one from zShops for: $9.93
Average review score:

Exceptional Book for leaders/ managers/employees
Excellent reading,very useful to the point. Stuff you can do right away that works. I picked stuff out of one chapter... acknowledgement programs information and I used it that week
I received feedback on it right away that people noticed the difference

The information is easy to read and easy to implement
I recommend to managers and employees
Eveyone wants a SAY in their outcomes


All Together Now: Records, Instructions and Wishes for Those You Love
Published in Paperback by Blazing Star Press (01 September, 1997)
Authors: Alan D. Schultz and Elaine Todd
Amazon base price: $23.95
Buy one from zShops for: $22.50

All the Way to the Bank: Smart Nonprofit Money Management
Published in Paperback by Larson Allen Weishair & Co Llp (01 June, 2002)
Author: Susan Kenny Stevens
Amazon base price: $17.95

All the Way to the Bank: Smart Money Management for Tomorrow's
Published in Paperback by Stevens Group at LarsonAllen (01 August, 1997)
Authors: Susan Kenny Stevens and Lisa M. Anderson
Amazon base price: $16.95
Used price: $8.25
Collectible price: $13.00
Buy one from zShops for: $13.99
Average review score:

Excellent primer for nonprofit staff.
Covers the basics such as cash flow, etc. Helps the nonprofit reader to get a glimpse into the world of the Donor-Investor who visits PhilanthropyNet.org and SocialCapital.net


All the Right Moves: A Financial Road Map for the College Senior and New Graduate
Published in Paperback by Writers Club Press (01 April, 2000)
Author: Janis Landis
Amazon base price: $15.95
Used price: $9.70
Buy one from zShops for: $9.75
Average review score:

All the Right Moves
All the Right Moves by Zachary Grossman and Janis Landis should be considered essential reading for all new college graduates. The book provides fundamental building blocks that will likely secure the financial future of those who follow it's easy to understand chapters.

Simply put - An inexpensive graduation gift, that keeps on giving!

Great financial guide for new college graduates
I would have thought that there were dozens of books like this one out there, but when I searched, that turned out not to be the case. I was glad to find this one, however, because it was so simple and straightforward in its message. If your college graduate is heading off to do an MBA at the Wharton school, this is probably not the book for him or her. But, if like mine, your college grad has only the fuzziest concept of how to manage money, this is the ideal book. It's clear, it's well-written, and the advice it gives is extraordinarily sensible. Take a look at the book, and I think you'll agree. Highly recommended!


All the Math You Need to Get Rich: Thinking with Numbers for Financial Success
Published in Paperback by Publishers Group West (15 October, 2001)
Author: Robert L. Hershey
Amazon base price: $11.87
List price: $16.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $8.50
Collectible price: $16.95
Buy one from zShops for: $10.87
Average review score:

RULE OF 70?
I PURCHASED THIS BOOK AND IT SEEMS TO BE GOOD EXCEPT THAT WHEN THE AUTHOR REFERS TO THE "RULE OF 70", I HAVE ALWAYS HEARS IT REFERRED TO AS "THE RULE OF 72". IS THIS AN ERROR OR A TYPO?

The book that changed my life
This book is great, now I am succesful and rich and married to many beutiful women. This book changed everything, and it can do the same for you.

Fun With Financial Math
Here is a handy guide to life's financial problems. It is more than just an inventory as it provides the steps necessary for working with the numbers that underlie the solutions. You aren't a math wiz? No problem. Every example, and there are so very many of them, comes complete with simple words and an easy walkthrough to the solution. They build on each other, much as our real world financial problems are extensions of each other. Question: What is the world's most powerful financial force? Answer: Compound interest, of course. It is easily applied and can be made to work for anyone. The author suggests using a pocket calculator, and for most of the examples it will suffice. The more adventurous reader will want a spreadsheet, as the more involved (and realistic) examples/problems have many parts. A descriptive phrase can then accompany each number, and the rather straightforward formulas can be programmed at the start. All in all this is an excellent primer for the realities of money. The author's humorous touch adds to the book's enjoyment and utility.


All States Tax Handbook 2004 (All States Tax Handbook)
Published in Paperback by Research Institute of America (01 December, 2003)
Amazon base price: $53.50
Collectible price: $114.25

All Quiet on the Western Front: Teacher's Resource Manual
Published in Paperback by Globe Fearon (01 March, 1996)
Author: Globe Fearon
Amazon base price: $7.05
Average review score:

It's the most exciting book i have every read
Paul and his classmates enlisted into the soilder of Germany during World War I. They ahd many fightings and they started to die one by one. All Paul's mates died because of baombardments but he was alive. He was the only one that alive from his friends. But finally he commited suicide. at

Love the book. I think Paul commited suicide!!!!!
I feel that the main character, Paul, commited suicide. His thoughts in the last chapter were something along the line of, 'I have nothing to believe in, all of my friends are dead, I've seen more than enough sites and have had more than enough experiences than I need in a life time, so why should I go on.' This is along the thought line of someone who is so utterly depressed that he would easily contemplate suicide, let alone do the terrible act. Another reason I feel this way is because Paul is one of the most experienced guys around in trench warfare. In the book, it explains that the recruits suffer the most casulties because they have no idea how high a bullet is because of the sound, what kind of shell is traveling through the air at the moment, and at what time is it safe to take off your gas-mask. Paul had survived three years of this loathesome bloodshed while relying on his experience. He would not be the type of person who would mysteriously fall in battle in one of the dullest days in World War I, deemed 'All Quiet On The Western Front.' The book also stated that when the men found him in the trench he had a total expression of calm, like all of his stress had been relieved and that the end had finally come.


Related Subjects: Money Book Review 401k 403(b) 457-plan 529-plan-college-savings Credit-card Credit-repair Debit-card Debt-consolidation Education-Savings-Account Employee-stock-option Individual-Retirement-Account Insurance Pension Social-security Wealth
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