If you have seen the old infomercials Robert Kiyosaki has made about retiring and making millions of dollars, you get the gist of this book. It is a three hundred and thirty five page ad for all of his other products under his Rich Dad moniker. Most frustrating is Kiyosaki's complete lack of skills as a writer. He freely admits he is not a great writer, and proceeds to prove it. He repeats himself constantly throughout the book, and writes pages of dialogue scenes he swears are from memory, but play like the worst staged scenes in an aforementioned infomercial.
Kiyosaki manipulates the reader with his constant berating. If you are doubtful of his methods, or if you question whether you can go running out and buying real estate with no money down, then that is your problem. You are wrong, and he is right. I was consistently made to feel stupid as I read this thing, and that was confirmed by the authors' smug attitude toward people who actually must work for a living.
Kiyosaki doesn't get specific about how to retire young and rich. He dances around the subject, throwing out little helpful hints here and there, but never gets down to the brass tacks when it comes to sitting down and doing it. Recommending I go to seminars and hire a bookkeeper are lovely ideas but then what? If anyone is retiring young and rich, it is the people behind this book length ad for other get-rich-quick products. If anything, reading this will inspire you to go it on your own, and ignore the advice of "experts" like this. Don't waste your money, or self-esteem, and avoid "Rich Dad's Retire Young, Retire Rich."
Book Review: "Legends and Lies: Great Mysteries of the American West" by Dale L. Walker
In twelve chapters, Walker touches on a dozen great mysteries of Western lore. He does not set out to solve any of them, but think again if ...
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