Money, A Memoir: Women, Emotions, and Cash by Liz Perle

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(Compact Disc - Abridged, 4 CDs, 5 hours)

Reader Rating: (2 ratings)

  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
  • Pub. Date: January 2006
  • ISBN-13: 9781593978877
  • Edition Description: Abridged, 4 CDs, 5 hours
 
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Synopsis

This bold and personal book digs below the surface of one of society’s last taboos—money—and illuminates how women’s emotional relationship with it affects every part of their lives

The Washington Post - Anya Kamenetz

A middle-aged woman who has given up her career to mind her small child and moved around the world for her husband's job suddenly finds herself divorced, homeless and unemployed. This is the doozy of an opener to Liz Perle's intriguing yet frustrating meditation, Money, a Memoir…the heart of this book—the actual memoir part—is compelling…She articulates internal contradictions that many women will recognize: covetous of good things yet afraid of showing it, outwardly independent yet expecting dates to foot the bill, self-indulgent in the short term yet willfully negligent about investments and savings.

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Biography

Liz Perle, who worked in book publishing as an editor and publisher for more than twenty years, recently joined the nonprofit world where she is the editor in chief of Common Sense Media, the nation’s leading nonpartisan organization designed to help families make the best media choices for their children. She is also the author of When Work Doesn’t Work Anymore. Perle lives in San Francisco with her husband and two children.

Customer Reviews

  • Reader Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Shoulda, Woulda, Coulda ... NEXT!by Anonymous

Reader Rating:

November 06, 2006: I started reading this in the bookstore. I was captivated over the first 4 pages. What an in depth revelation of a shallow and empty life! Problem was, when I purchased the book and got home to what I thought would be an all day read, I was very dissapointed. Seems Ms. Perle is all better now that she got a grip and got remarried. The financial discourse is even shallower than her personal life pre-crisis. Read the first few pages in the store while sipping a latte or two. They will be more fulfilling than the full read.

Disappointingby Anonymous

Reader Rating:

February 13, 2006: I was intrigued by this book and found some of it interesting. The useful part of the book are some of the anecdotes and stories. However, much of the book I found to be disorganized and disjointed. Also, while a woman myself, I didn't quite see the point (marketing?) why to constrain the book to women. After all, many of us have mates and relatives and friends and money conflicts and issues with those folks. The author lacks authority and credentials in the finance realm. I have to question some of the premises of the book as well. The biggest is that women don't take an interest in investing. That certainly isn't the experience of myself and many, many women that I know! I bought and read a copy of Mind Over Money and preferred that book over this one.