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The Secret of Shelter Island: Money and What Matters

The Secret of Shelter Island: Money and What MattersAuthor: Alexander Green
Publisher: Wiley
Category: eBooks


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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 42 reviews
Sales Rank: 29,352

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: 1
Pages: 265
Number Of Items: 1

Dewey Decimal Number: 332.024

Publication Date: June 15, 2009

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Product Description
Most of us devote a substantial percentage of our waking hours to making, spending and having more. This desire to accumulate is natural. But when a bigger bank balance - or the things it can buy - becomes our animating purpose, disappointment generally follows. In The Secret of Shelter Island, nationally renowned financial analyst and bestselling author Alexander Green explores the complicated relationship we all have with money and reveals the road map to a rich life.

The timing could hardly be better. After more than twenty-five years of virtually uninterrupted prosperity, the U.S. economy has hit a rough patch. Yet to the extent that downturns like the current one shake up the status quo and force us to re-examine our goals and priorities, they also offer enormous opportunities. The Secret of Shelter Island provides an ideal starting point. Drawing on some of today-s best minds and many of history-s greatest thinkers, it is both a much-needed source of inspiration and an insightful look at the role of both money and values in the pursuit of the good life.

The book is arranged around four central themes. In Part I, "A Rich Mind," Green explores such key questions as: How important is money in your life? What is it giving you? What is it costing you? In Part II, "What-s Most Important," he discusses how to calculate your real net worth-without using a financial statement. In Part III, "Attitudes of Gratitude," he offers powerful insights based on a deceptively simple philosophy of life. In the final section of the book "The Search for Meaning," he delivers a refreshing take on the universal principles that guide us all - or should. The Secret of Shelter Island is full of practical wisdom. More than just a personal philosophy, it is a profound and utterly modern commentary on timeless values, the search for meaning and what it means to be truly wealthy.




Customer Reviews:
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4 out of 5 stars The Secret of Shelter Island   May 24, 2010
Jim Estill
While in the library yesterday The Secret of Shelter Island - Money and what Matters caught my eye. I assumed it was going to be about Long Island Shelter Island but it is not. It is more a book about Affluenza - how to appropriately deal with money and how it relates to happiness.

It is a great and well researched book with the basic message - Money cannot make you happy and in many cases can make you miserable.

The book has lots of great quotes:

"An unexpected monetary windfall can alter your life in ways you cannot imagine. Some people change their priorities or make bad decisions. Others lose sight of their long held values. Still others discover they have attracted the wrong sort of people they mistakenly call friends."

It quotes Mark Skousen's book Econopower as saying the 4 elements of Happiness are:

1- Rewarding and honest employment
2 - Recreation
3 - Love and friendship
4 - Spiritual development

Laurence G. Boldt once wrote "The life you spend doing what you love is a different life indeed from putting your life out to hire to the highest bidder. The only way you can can say it makes no difference is to say life makes no difference."

And it quotes Warren Buffet "we've long felt that the only value of stock forecasters is to make the fortune tellers look good...forecasts are poison and should be locked up in a safe place away from children and also from grownups"





2 out of 5 stars Not so great   May 14, 2010
Steven L. Hunter (Livermore, CA)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This was not worth the money. It is a philosophy book, not a money book.


3 out of 5 stars Not a bad book, but the title and introduction are deceptive   March 4, 2010
David A. Monte (Santa Maria, CA USA)
In reading the title one would think the book has something to do with money. It does not. The introduction proports to raise us to a higher plane of spiritual wealth, a plane we cannot touch with money alone. The plane the author aspires to is different than money and perhaps even higher, but certainly not spiritual. Metaphysical would be a better term in this case. If you are looking for spirituality or spiritual principles this is not the right book.


5 out of 5 stars Good Stuff   March 3, 2010
Kurt Jacobson (Evergreen,Colorado)
good stuff, easy to pick up and read for 5-10 minutes at a time for you busy people out there


5 out of 5 stars A "real" must read!   February 5, 2010
D. Lincoln (Ruidoso, NM)

Read this book and immediately ordered 24 copies to give to everyone in my office and to my married children! It is not an investment book, although there are some good references to that end, but rather a "life" book that you will want to read over and over again.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 42
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