The Everything Personal Finance Book: Manage, Budget, Save, and Invest Your Money Wisely

November 3, 2009
By
10407149 4 The Everything Personal Finance Book: Manage, Budget, Save, and Invest Your Money Wisely
 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

511G6TT90PL. SL160  The Everything Personal Finance Book: Manage, Budget, Save, and Invest Your Money Wisely

Product Description
If you want to make money—and protect it—you have to think smart money management. Whether you’re looking to manage your finances for the short or long term, The Everything® Personal Finance Book is the perfect handbook to help you save, budget, and invest your money. Covering everything from weekly budgeting to 401(k) planning, The Everything® Personal Finance Book provides practical information for achieving the best financial results possible. Pa… More >>

The Everything Personal Finance Book: Manage, Budget, Save, and Invest Your Money Wisely

2 Responses to The Everything Personal Finance Book: Manage, Budget, Save, and Invest Your Money Wisely

  1. S. Tang on November 3, 2009 at 8:04 am

    I was looking for a second perspective on personal finance books to make a comparison with “Personal Finance for Dummies 4th Edition.”

    While the writing style is acceptable and the author seems knowledgeable, I don’t feel there is enough content compared the the Dummies book.

    The big thing I liked about this book is that it spends a chapter section about the present/future value of money and how money compounds in an interest-bearing account. The author shows a basic equation, but also provides some quick lookup tables to save time on calculations. This section does give a sense of how money can grow. Most other personal finance books don’t even discuss the math or give examples, and I think everybody should understand the basic math behind this concept, as it applies to anything that gains interest (your investments, bank accounts, etc.) or charges interest (your credit card, mortgage, etc.)

    The other thing that was good were the worksheet examples to allow you to tabulate your expenses and do a net worth analysis (list your assets and liabilities).

    But for many other topics in the book, it gives too general description of the topics, and it does not offer too many examples or anecdotes to help reinforce the concepts. The Personal Finance for Dummies book does try to use examples or anecdotes to try to press the importance of the topic to the reader a little better.

    I would not bother with this book. It is “ok” and cheap, but the content needs more substance.
    Rating: 3 / 5

  2. ostrov on December 3, 2009 at 6:44 am

    Thank you,
    very interesting article

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Powered by Yahoo! Answers