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Rich Dad, Poor Dad Abridged

Rich Dad, Poor Dad Abridged

List Price: $24.98
Your Price: $16.49
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You Can't Afford Not to Buy This Book
Review: This book has changed my life. If you don't have the money to buy this book, borrow it. You'll never be the same. It's written in an easy conversational style that uses plain simple language to help understand finances. Buy it today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE TRUE AWAKENING
Review: THE CONTENTS OF THIS BOOK WERE SO POWERFUL IT DID TURN MY WORLD UPSIDE DOWN. FOR THE FIRST TIME SOMEONE HAS WRITTEN THE TRUTH ABOUT MONEY AND HOW TO LEVERAGE WITH IT! I AM 28 AND HAVE BEEN INVESTING IN STOCKS FOR 4 YEARS NOW, MADE QUITE A BIT OF MONEY AS WELL AS SPENT QUITE A BIT MORE ONLY TO WORK HARDER TO MAKE MORE. ROBERTS BOOK HAS CLEARED THE AIR OF CONFUSION WITH PLAIN AND SIMPLE TRUTH. I FOCUSED ON MY NET WORTH, BOY WAS I MISLED. TODAY I FOCUS ON MY TOTAL ASSETS! IF ALL YOU HAVE IS $20.00 IN YOUR POCKET, BUY THIS BOOK, IT WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE AND GIVE YOU THE KNOWLEGDE TO BE FINANCIALY EDUCATED AS WELL AS THE ONLY OUTLOOK YOU WILL NEED. I SWEAR THIS BOOK CONTAINS SIMPLE TRUTHS THE COMPANY YOU ARE WORKING FOR WOULD PAY FOR YOU NOT TO LEARN! A TRUE AWAKENING, THANK YOU SINCERELY ROBERT.

A FAN AND READER FOR LIFE, LAWRENCE GILES

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good book ... here are some others.
Review: If you want to know about how to achieve financial independence, your best bet is to hang around people who have, or are in the process of, achieving financial independence. Kiyosaki has hit on a key point -- the reason the rich teach different things to their kids than poor people do is simple: they KNOW those things by experience. A poor person can not teach you how to attain financial independence. All they can teach you is how to be broke. So stop listening to your broke co-workers and your broke neighbors and the broke people at your church or temple and listen to, and read books by, people who have achieved success, and who are focused on the positive possibilities of the future. And have an open mind -- if you aren't wealthy and someone is trying to tell you how to get there, the smartest thing you can do is shut up and listen. (I teach broke people how to leverage the Web to make money -- more than half of them know nothing about it, but tell me everything about why I'm wrong.) Two good books you should read if you liked this one: The Roaring 2000s, by Harry Dent, and "Don't Worry, Make Money," by Richard Carlson.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent book if you want freedom from the rat race!
Review: This is one of the best books I have read in a long time

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wake-up call to middle-class america !
Review: Thank you so much Robert Kiyosaki!

After an eye-opening layoff back in '93, & several periods of involuntary unemployment while "between contracts" since, I've been forced to undergo a growth process & reconsider my approach to business & finance. Ultimately, I've learned to think like an entrepreneur rather than an employee in order to survive in today's new economy.

People don't use logic when it comes to handling their business. They live life being bounced back & forth like a ping-pong ball between 2 emotions -- fear & greed. That's why they spend 40+ years of their lives in a cubicle working for money, instead of 5-10 years, in tandem with financial intelligence, having money work for them.

Both of these emotions can be harnessed & used constructively -- but only with a properly educated & disciplined mind.

Unfortunately, such mental powers are right-brain rather than left-brain oriented. And the "traditional" education system does not "go there". Nor are such capabilities taught at home -- as middle-class America can't give away something that it does not possess.

Most people over 65 are BROKE, end of story. And these are the same people who taught us growing up & all thru school. Only 8% of these people can stop working and maintain their current lifestyle -- the rest of them have the government, pensions and relatives to fall back on. And, for those people under 40, who think that SS, pensions and peak-earning-years relatives will be around for them too -- get a big lunch, babe!

We've followed their advice: get highly educated, work hard, save & invest; and thus, we've grown up to be just like them. We invest in liabilities that we think are assets, and we pay everybody else before we pay ourselves, instead of afterward. We're TAXED when the money is earned, TAXED when the money is spent, TAXED in capital gains when what little we do manage to keep grows in the "asset column" of our balance sheet. And much of the remainder of our capital gains is negated by INFLATION.

Over a 40-year career, given that we stay in a linear income (hours for dollars) arrangement, better than half of that time -- 26 years -- will be spent either working for the government in the form of taxes or banks in the form of interest on our debt. We'll spend most of our lives trying to put a $5 bill where a $50 bill needs to go.

It's time to start thinking outside of the box. The world is leaving us behind.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Should be required reading for High Schoolers
Review: This book will be especially helpful to young people with their career and life planning. Give a copy to everyone you know who has pre-college kids. Coupled with his follow-up work, The Cashflow Quadrant, it explores the issues of money and life in a balanced way and gives people of all ages an idea of what effects their choices will have on their life. This kind of knowledge can save years of trial and error and lead to a much happier, more fulfilling life. I also recommend his board games as a fun way to practice the principals from the books.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: SHEESH!
Review: I remember the key premise of this book being uttered by Claire Huxtable on "The Cosby Show," when Vanessa's friends called her "a little rich girl." Attorney Huxtable, wife of the good Dr. Huxtable, sat Vanessa down and said "Honey, we are not rich; rich is when your money works for you, not when you work for your money." Well, duh! I think that the best way to get rich in America today is to write a book based on some premise that anyone with half a brain should already know!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I LOVE THIS BOOK!
Review: The man who wrote this book is PURE genius! I'm only 21 years old, and just by reading this book I feel like I am a million times ahead of the game compared to professionals who are years older than me! I have recently been saving up since reading this book, and I know it will help me years down the road when I start my own business. I see nothing wrong with this book, and anyone who thinks otherwise is exactly the same kinds of people that Robert Kiyosaki points out in this book. The average John Doe doesn't understand the concept of investing into a good business. I quote Mr. Kiyosak, "If you're in a hole, stop digging!" My great-grandfather had his own business, and told my father,"It's best to get $1 from many people rather than get $100 from only one person" He said that at a time in America when people belived that good grades made more money... but still people have the same poor "money is bad" mindset today! In a class I took last year at college, the professor asked all of us what we would do if we won $1 million? Like most people, everyone in the class said, "I would buy a car, a house, big stereos, stuff like that" I can't believe people are that ignorant! When it was my turn to say what I would do if I won the lottery, I replied, "I would save it up, and invest it into a business like a fitness center, apartments in a college town or help my younger brother buy a guitar shop when he gets older" Everyone looked at me like I was from another planet when I said that! Again, this is the best book on financial advice I have ever read! I can't thank Robert Kiyosaki enough for the advice he gave in this book-he is one of the FEW smartest business men in the world! It really has prepared me for the future.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Okay, but I found better
Review: The problem with so many money books is they assume that being rich is what matters most. Of course financial security is nice, but if you make money the focus of your life, you're lost. After plowing through a ton of financial books, I found only one (The Mindful Money Guide) that seems truly balanced about money. This wise book recognizes the virtue of simplifying your finances without forgetting about the bottom line. It also recognizes the emotional and social effects of money.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: This is a joke
Review: This book is a joke. It does provide a "revolutionary" idea that is just what many people want to hear, i.e. "don't work for your money." This is highly useful for the author in that it gets people to buy the book and buy copies for their friends. (afterall *he* certainly is not working for his money)

The truth is, his line of self help personal finance junk is just a small step up from the trinkets he was selling before- he is merely capitalizing on another fad.

Everyone wants to believe that there are some "secrets" that the rich must know, and this provides a nearly irresistable urge to read the book. Resist.


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