Good morning!
A bunch of new money books have come out in our community recently, and I wanted to pass them along in case you find yourself in any of these particular situationsβ¦
And they all are indeed pretty particular! Which is great β you need to dig in deep sometimes and focus instead of being hit with βgeneralitiesβ all the time. And these books cover everything from death to consumerism to the service industry to financial feminism and even stripping π Never know what youβre gonna get these days from us!
Here they are below β I hope they help.
Β
********
βTippedβ
The Life Changing Guide to Financial Freedom for Waitresses, Bartenders, Strippers, and All Other Service Industry Professionals
This one comes from an up and comer in the space, Barbara Sloan, who Iβve had the pleasure of meeting in real life this year and thoroughly enjoyed hanging with her. She blogs/coaches over at TippedFinance.com, and hereβs more about the book per her website and Amazon:
******
******
βAfter the Death of Your Spouseβ
Next Financial Steps for Surviving Spouses
This book comes from Mike Piper over at the (incredibly helpful!) website, The Oblivious Investor, and was brought to my attention by a fellow reader, KT. Hereβs what she sent me:
βHey there! Hope you are great π Have you seen Mike Piper/Oblivious Investorβs new book β After the Death of Your Spouse? Itβs a really helpful, tactical guide for getting through all the estate stuff and seems like a great companion for a legacy binder β I feel like you posted about those at some point??? Anyway, morbid subject, but I thought you might find it interesting.β
Indeed I had, and indeed I agree! You knock out this book AND a legacy binder and you are straight π₯π₯π₯. Not to mention the blessing in everyoneβs life whenever you finally retire from Earth! Nothing could be more helpful during times of crisis, so if not now, at least put it on your radar to start working on laterβ¦
Hereβs where you can find a few of these Legacy Binders:
******
And then hereβs more about the book itself, via Mikeβs website:
Many surviving spouses find themselves overwhelmed by all the administrative and financial to-do items that have to be handled in the months after their spouseβs death. Thereβs a lot to do, and theyβre supposed to get it all done while grieving. And in many cases, the situation is made more difficult by the fact that the surviving spouse is not the one who regularly handled the household finances.
I wrote this book to walk people through it, in plain language. Itβs the book I want my spouse to have, in case something happens to me.
You can learn more/purchase here: After the Death of Your Spouse
******
βBuyer Bewareβ
Harnessing Our Consumer Power for a Safe, Fair, and Transparent Marketplace
Now this one comes from Marta Tellado, president and CEO of Consumer Reports, which was brought to my attention by Rita R. Robison who was kind enough to ship me a copy! Bless her heartβ¦
I asked her what she thought of it so far as Iβm in the middle of three other books and donβt dare crack open a fourth yet!, and hereβs what she responded with:
******
The book is fabulous, like I thought it would be. Itβs also upsetting because the level of deceit and wrongdoing from corporations is staggering. The first section on the Big Four β Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Apple β is particularly disturbing. How much they control our data is deeply troubling.
In terms of what your FIRE readers might be interested in, Tellado gives information on how to protect yourself and your data. On the Financial Fairness chapter, your readers might be interested in hidden fees. They already know about avoiding payday loans, keeping up with student debt payments, and checking their credit report.
Then, thereβs consumer action. Not normally in your wheelhouse, but, Iβd argue, something your readers need to know more about and participate in. The book also has something Iβve never seen before: QR codes that take you to web pages. Amazing. Consumer Reports is such a large organization they can develop web materials based on her book.
******
And then hereβs more about the book from Amazon:
Youβve been getting ripped off.
The rules that have protected consumers for decades are failing. Companies are spying on us. Many of the products we once trusted are dangerous and failing at alarming rates. Whether we are buying a crib, a small appliance, an iPhone app, or shopping for car insurance, itβs become harder than ever to know whether the choices we make in the marketplace are putting us at risk-either from physical harm or the abuse of our personal data by hackers or corporations.
This is intolerable. Itβs wrong. And we donβt have to put up with it anymore. Marta L. Tellado, the president and CEO of Consumer Reports, has been an advocate for consumers for decades. In Buyer Aware, Tellado shows you the steps you can take to protect yourself from predatory business practices, and how to exert your inherent power as a consumer to spur politicians and businesses to clean up their act. Only then can we ensure that we have an economy that is fair, safe, and transparent for all, and puts consumers first.
You can learn more/pick up here: Buyer Beware
******
βFinancial Feministβ
Overcome the Patriarchyβs Bullsh*t to Master Your Money and Build a Life You Love
Lastly, we got Financial Feminism from Tori Dunlap whoβs freakinβ EXPLODED on the scene these and will probably not be slowing down anytime soonβ¦ (her company just crossed 7 figures in revenue β in one month!!). Sheβs a polarizing figure in our community, but ultimately is on a mission to help every last person on this earth get their $$$ right.
Hereβs more about her book, which comes out on December 27th (but you can pre-order now):
*******
Tori Dunlap was always good with money. As a kid, she watched her prudent parents balance their checkbook every month and learned to save for musical tickets by gathering pennies in an Altoids tin. But she quickly discovered that her experience with money was pretty unusual, especially among her female friends.
It wasnβt our fault. Investigating this financial literacy and wealth gap, Tori found that girls are significantly less likely to receive a holistic financial education; weβre taught to restrain our spending, while boys are taught about investing and rewarded for pursuing wealth. In adulthood, women are hounded by the unfounded stereotype of the frivolous spenders whose lattes are to blame for the wealth gap. And when something like, say, a global pandemic happens, weβre the first to have jobs cut and the last to re-enter the workforce. Itβs no wonder money is a source of anxiety and a barrier to equality for so many of us.
But what if money didnβt mean restriction, and instead, choice? The ability to luxuriously travel, quit toxic jobs, donate to important organizations, retire early? The freedom to live the life you want, and change the world while you do it?
Tori founded Her First $100K to teach women to overcome the unique obstacles standing in the way of their financial freedom. In Financial Feminist, she distills the principles of her shame- and judgment-free approach to paying off debt, figuring out your value categories to spend mindfully, saving money without monk-like deprivation, and investing in order to spend your retirement tanning in Tulum.
Featuring journaling prompts, deep-dives into the invisible aspects of the financial landscape, and interviews with experts on everything moneyβfrom predatory credit card companies to the racial wealth gap and voting with your dollarsβFinancial Feminist is the ultimate guide to making your money work harder for you (rather than the other way around.)
You can learn more/pre-order it here: Financial Feminism
*******
And there we have it! Four great, drastically different, books ready for your perusal if you shall deem them worthy π And the great thing is that any of these you pick up supports the community we love so much too! A double win!
βTill next timeβ¦
*Links to Amazon are affiliate links
(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)
Get blog posts automatically emailed to you!