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Tarfumes.com - The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy

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List Price: $22.00
Our Price: $14.96
Your Save: $ 7.04 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Longstreet Press
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Hardcover Dewey Decimal Number: 305.5 EAN: 9781563523304 ISBN: 1563523302 Label: Longstreet Press Manufacturer: Longstreet Press Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 256 Publication Date: 1996-10-25 Publisher: Longstreet Press Studio: Longstreet Press
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Editorial Reviews:
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A New York Times bestseller for eighty-nine weeks. Learn the seven common denominators that show up again and again among people who have built their personal fortunes from scratch--then put these lessons to work for you!
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Check it out at the library! Comment: This book's subject matter is good. The problem-it reads like a bad research paper. It's so boring!!!!! If you're interested in stats on every page, have at it. Otherwise, check it out at the library and skim the main points.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The millionaire net door Comment: my husband loves it! lots of facts about millionaires and how they live and spend their $
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Intro to Wealth Building Comment: This is one of the best books on wealth bulding I have even read and I've read hundreds of them.
It does a superb job of profiling key characteristic and behaviors that American typically fall into putting themselves deep into debt and then gives simple and easy to connect with ways to counter these behaviors to put yourself on the right track to financial independence.
Really, really great! Do yourself and your family a favor and read it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Must Read Comment: This was a surprising book, because it goes against popular myth as to who are the wealthy and why.
If politicians and business leaders had read this book, we may not have gotten ourselves into the current financial mess!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Good Read Comment: Quite the eye-opener about how many supposedly rich people are actually being supported by their parents. I did think it had a lot of undertones about how being cheap, I mean frugal, was noble in its own right and there's nothing worth spending money on except charity and education. But it was motivational, inspirational and educational.
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