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How Not to Get Rich: Or Why Being Bad Off Isn't So Bad

by Robert Sullivan

List Price:$9.95
Amazon Price:$9.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
Average Rating:4.5 out of 5 stars
Lowest New Price:$1.95
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Editorial Reviews
Product Description
In the tradition of James Thurber and E.B. White, How Not to Get Rich is a timely spoof filled with witty instructions on how to avoid the perilous path toward millionaire-dom.
 
“Large numbers of Americans are becoming rich every day, and by rich I mean loaded, as in loaded to the gills.  You could soon be one of them.  On the other hand, you might not be one of them, for a number of reasons, including the odds, which are weighted heavily against you.  Because while large numbers of Americans are becoming rich every day, even larger numbers of Americans are not.  How does not getting rich happen?  At what point in your life do you become rich or not rich?  Is it fate or hard work that decides whether you go onto a life with several homes and a yacht or several credit cards and a second mortgage?”
 
In this book, Robert Sullivan, an expert in the art of not getting rich and staying that way, shows us some simple, quick ways to cultivate a basic day-to-day attitude that will lead to not getting rich, as well as a few long-term strategies that will help you stay that way. For instance, a good well-rounded education is a must if you are planning on working your entire life and ending up with little or nothing. Choose a field of study that will be personally rewarding but has no apparent application in the real world, such as medieval literature or traditional music. And by all means choose an investment strategy that will definitely not get you rich, such as following the herd. Along the way, spend your money unwisely, read novels and books, marry for love, and waste otherwise money-making hours throwing a Frisbee in the park and playing with your kids, becoming the kind of role model that will never be featured on Forbes’s list of the wealthiest people in the world. Sharp, funny, and ultimately comforting, How Not to Get Rich is a guide to happiness without wealth—probably not worth the price, but what is?



All Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 out of 5 stars
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

4 out of 5 starsLife of slack, 2008-01-14
If you want to live the life of slack of your dreams like me, this book is a good starting point. Learn how not to make money, not have ambition (except to be a slacker), and how to not impress people! It seemed like a pretty good book, but I lacked the motivation to finish it. Sigh....


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 starsA work of Genius, 2007-11-18
My wife recently gave me Sullivan's "Rats" as a birthday present. (No, she doesn't think I'm a rodent--at least I don't think she does--but she knows I'm interested in books about cities.) I loved "Rats"--a truly great read--and ran out to get Sullivan's "Meadowlands." Another great book! Sullivan is learned AND funny--a pretty rare combination, and "How Not To Get Rich" is equal parts wise and hilarious. This is one brilliant writer. His bio says he's also an editor at VOGUE magazine. Go figure. Any how, I think this guy has a Pulitzer Prize in his future.


28 of 30 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 starshilarious, fierce, and weirdly uplifting, 2005-09-17
I have heard amazing stories about this author, who also wrote "Rats" and "A Whale Hunt" and "The Meadowlands." Once, it is said, as a protest against the SEC, he lay all afternoon on the couch of a friend and counted to twenty-four thousand by ones in a snarling voice. Anyway, this book is of course a very funny satire of how-to-get-rich books, and an eloquent warning against the ultimate metaphysical emptiness of the peculiarly American yearning for massive wealth. But it's also, à la Thoreau's Walden but far less preachy, a material and spiritual self-help book, an old-fashioned philosophical treatise on the good life. It made me feel pretty okay about certain important life decisions I've made that have had nothing at all to do with making money. Then I looked at my credit card bill.




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