The 4-Hour work Week: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich | 
enlarge | Author: Timothy Ferris Creator: Ray Porter Publisher: Blackstone Audio Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $18.09 You Save: $11.86 (40%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 725 reviews Sales Rank: 244869
Media: CD-ROM Edition: Unabridged Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 200 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
ISBN: 0786170220 Dewey Decimal Number: 650.1 EAN: 9780786170227 ASIN: 0786170220
Publication Date: April 9, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new audibook delivered direct from our US warehouse in 3-6 days (Expedited) or 10-14 days (Standard). Expedited shipping recommended for speedy delivery. Over 1 million satisfied customers.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Tim Ferriss is an extraordinary young man on a mission. The twenty-eight-year-old serial vagabond and successful entrepreneur has been teaching a wildly popular course at Princeton University for the past four years--a how-to and why-to guide to throwing out the old tools and methods for success (balancing life and work, retiring well, having a great nest egg) and replacing them with a whole new way of living. Readers can lead a rich life by working only four hours a week, freeing up the rest of their time to spend it living the lives they want.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 720 more reviews...
Interesting read with a few great points August 21, 2008 This is a book that you'll either love or hate. Timothy has a good writing style, and has plenty of great ideas, however some are quite controversial and I'd expect some people would dismiss them quickly.
I didn't agree with all of them (hey, it'd be hard to agree completely to any book), yet they were well presented, and it certainly makes you think about how you spend your life.
Fun read...You still need to think for yourself August 19, 2008 I really enjoyed this book. While I would love to quit my job and move closer towards a four-hour work week, I was really just looking for information about trying to get a product to market in the easiest way possible, which is what the author has provided.
While I don't necessarily agree with all of the advice given in this book (I'm too much of a control freak to check emails only twice a day, and I'm fine with that), I often find myself coming up with ideas that I think are great, only to let them drift off into the ether because the task of creating and marketing them seemed too daunting. What I've gotten from this book more than anything else is a new hobby: a way to turn my ideas into product for between $1200-2000 on average. Considering the costs of some other hobbies (travel, golf, etc.), this doesn't seem that bad, and at least there's a slim chance that any one of my ideas could be life changing, so there's always excitement too.
People reading this book and hoping that it is some sort panacea may be a little disappointed. The author does spell out for you how to make a life like his. However, it will take a huge leap of faith (not to mention a successful product/idea) to start. He does his best to ease you into his way of thinking, and an intelligent person is going to process his advice and make their own decisions. The author is also not promising riches beyond your wildest dreams. He's selling a way for you to enrich your life experiences, and the purpose of your business is to finance these experiences.
Overall, lots of good information, and very motivational. If you've ever had an idea that you thought could change the world, or you wanted to turn the ratio of work to living that you do upside down, you should at least take a cursory glance at this book.
What a terrible waste of time to read August 17, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Disappointment is hardly the word I would use when describing this book. Sad that people think this way - - all I can think is that the book was written for saps. And, I feel like a sap for buying it. Stay away from this. It's a complete and total waste of your valuable time. Swindle is a great word to describe this author, the book and everything about it.
One of few good books I read...!!! August 14, 2008 Good concepet, good ideas, little bit of bragging by the author, sometimes little unrealistic. In summary, you will enjoy reading this book and will make you think of broader prospective.
My Former Bible August 14, 2008 Only two types of people have been and will be attracted to reading this book: those who hope it's about one thing and those who know it's about the other. The former belong to the timid, powerless, low-self esteem majority who are simply looking for the ultimate guide to gaining the respect and admiration of their peers. The latter belong to the unscrupulous, dare I say sociopathic ever-growing minority whose end goal is to win at everything against everyone by any means. Once the book has been read and fully digested, one of two conclusions will be reached. The first is a sudden awareness of what a perfectly outstanding tool they hold in their hands and the limitless rewards it can afford them. The second is absolute disgust and horror at having just gleamed the inside of every cold, emotionless fascist heart throughout the whole of human history. Interestingly, the timid are no always the ones repulsed and the ruthless are not always the ones aroused. The tide can break either way.
Shortly after this book was published, I happened upon it in a bookstore and knew I had to have it. A blaze of energy electrified my body and pounded through the deepest recesses of my mind. I was on fire, I couldn't put it down and yet I knew I could never share it with anyone, the way a child might hide away their favorite toy. In truth I became obsessed. I had to learn and then master every element of every law and take supreme authority over every aspect of my life. Indeed, this book, The 48 Laws of Power, became my bible, the most passionate conquest I had ever sought to undertake.
Within its pages I met with the reflection of every gruesome bully and every merry manipulator I had ever known. Their power was uncanny and yet so mysterious, mostly because I could never fathom how such apparently absent minds could lay so cool yet strike with such poison. It was awe-inspiring, and I had to come to terms with their secrets. The secrets that earned them respect from their enemies and fear from their admirers. The secrets that won them the most buxom women, who always appeared so entranced by even their rudest and most audacious displays. "How could they get away with everything so smoothly?!" I had wondered. "How could they be so desirable?!" I had thought. "HOW?!"
Well...here is how. It is simple.
Some people are given to a heredity and/or an upbringing that nourishes what is commonly considered 'bad' behavior. Certain genes as well as certain parenting styles perpetuate an attitude of unruliness which leads in its purest variety to utter contempt for anyone else's thoughts, feelings, or needs. Their minds develop without a balanced set of experiences, leading them to logically conclude that the information that they did receive must indeed be correct. This is also applicable to those who suffer violence in their youth, even if that violence is not carried out physically. The fact remains that whatever world with which one is presented is accepted as the unmitigated truth. 'Bad' behavior is usually viewed by such a person as normal. Thus selfishness, cruelty, and manipulation are seen as strengths, while compassion, kindness and humility are seen as weaknesses.
Surely there are a bevy of other factors that cannot go without mention. High intelligence, a pleasing appearance, a particular talent, et cetra can all act as lauchpads for immorality if similar virtues in others go unrecognized as being equal. This sense of equality is what it all comes down to, in fact. The very idea of power assumes that another cannot or should not be in a position to where the perspectives of both can be viewed as equally valid. On the one end is the person who is possessed by their own image, on the other is the person who believes that they have no intrinsic worth at all. The two feed off of each other in a sadistic/masochistic symbiotic relationship. The point then comes to bear that a person who believes himself powerful only exists so long as the other believes the same thing. Put two people who both see power as the ultimate attainment and you have the setting of the average business affair. The result can be only one of two things. One will cave, allowing the other to dominate, or neither party will cave, effectively precipitating resentment and rage within both. The former leads to a continuation of the cycle, the latter leads to war.
Buy this book if you don't care about anyone but yourself, and it pleases you to see another man crumble. Do not buy this book if you have even the slightest interest in saving yourself from years of unnecessary struggle. Remember that the tide does break both ways, and you do not know who you may become if you toss your ethics in the wastebasket. Needless to say, I was the timid one who was sick of being overlooked, but in the end, it was this book that I tossed into the wastebasket. Your call.
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