Get a Financial Life: Personal Finance in Your Twenties and Thirties
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“Newsweek”
A daring book aimed at Generation Xers unafraid of a blunt author who will tell them what to do fast….A life’s worth of smart financial advice.
Paul A. Samuelson
Professor of Economics Emeritus, MIT; Nobel Laureate in Economics
Shaw said youth is wasted on the young. I suspect the Kobliner financial wisdoms will work out well at all our ages.
Saul Hansell
Business Reporter,” The New York Times”
“Get a Financial Life” is an expert yet reassuringly simple guide to mastering your money, for people trying to keep afloat in the wake of the baby boomers.
Deborah Stead
“The New York Times”
A highly readable and substantial guide to the grown-up worlds of money and business. Backed up by bibliographies, source lists, and useful phone numbers, this book could be tucked into one of those ubiquitous backpacks to guide novices through the thickets of apartment rentals, mortgage applications, taxes and more. Its strength is in explaining both the principles and the practicalities involved in each chunk of the landscape.
“Newsweek”
A daring book….A life’s worth of smart financial advice.
Stuart Varney
“CNN Business News”
Dean Shepherd
Anchor, CNBC
Laying a solid financial foundation is one of the most important and rewarding tasks facing young people today. In “Get a Financial Life,” Beth Kobliner has created a great guide that will make the job much easier and a lot more fun.
Paul A. Samuelson
Institute Professor Emeritus, MIT; Nobel Laureate in Economics
Shaw said youth is wasted on the young. I suspect the Kobliner financial wisdoms will work out well at all our ages.
Burton G. Malkiel
Chemical Bank Chairman’s Professor of Economics, Princeton University; author, “A Random Walk Down Wall Street”
One of the best guides to help young people get a handle on money matters.
Paul A. Volcker
Former Chairman, Federal Reserve Board
With all those new choices, personal financial decision making is getting more and more complicated, even for the computer generation. Beth Kobliner’s book provides a much-needed and sensible guide.
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