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The Number: What Do You Need for the Rest of Your Life and What Will It Cost?

The Number: What Do You Need for the Rest of Your Life and What Will It Cost?Author: Lee Eisenberg
Publisher: Free Press
Category: Book

List Price: $15.00
Buy New: $2.14
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Format: Bargain Price
Media: Paperback
Pages: 288
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.4 x 0.9

Dewey Decimal Number: 300
ASIN: B000WPPUWG

Publication Date: December 26, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Do you know your Number?

What happens if you don't make it to your Number?

Do you have a plan?

The often-avoided, anxiety-riddled discussion about financial planning for a secure and fulfilling future has been given a new starting point in The Number by Lee Eisenberg. The buzz of professionals and financial industry insiders everywhere, the Number represents the amount of money and resources people will need to enjoy the active life they desire, especially post-career. Backed by imaginative reporting and insights, Eisenberg urges people to assume control and responsibility for their standard of living, and take greater aim on their long-term aspirations.

In 1999, Eisenberg was in the midst of downshifting from having served as the Editor-in-Chief of Esquire and other high profile positions. He was "half-in, half-out of the workplace" with an enviable consulting position at Time, Inc., and a family comfortably settled in the suburbs. That's when he received an unexpected offer from the Wisconsin-based Lands' End which, in the end, he couldn't resist. It meant uprooting his family and moving to the rural heartland, and taking on the challenges of an entirely new way of life. Before the move, he admits, "I was worried about the Number." Once in Wisconsin, Eisenberg confesses that the "Number was leading us around by our noses."

From Wall Street to Main Street USA, The Number means different things to different people. It is constantly fluctuating in people's minds and bank accounts. To some, the Number symbolizes freedom, validation of career success, the ticket to luxurious indulgences and spiritual exploration; to others, it represents the bewildering and nonsensical nightmare of an impoverished existence creeping up on them in their old age, a seemingly hopeless inevitability that they would rather simply ignore than confront. People are highly private and closed-mouthed when it comes to discussing their Numbers, or lack thereof, for fear they might either reveal too much or display ineptitude.

In The Number, Eisenberg describes this secret anxiety as the "Last Taboo," a conundrum snared in confusing financial lingo. He sorts through the fancy jargon and translates the Number into commonsense advice that resonates just as easily with the aging gods and goddesses of corporate boardrooms as it does with ordinary people who are beginning to realize that retirement is now just a couple of decades away. Believing that the Number is as much about self-worth as it is net worth, Eisenberg strives to help readers better understand and more efficiently manage all aspects of their life, money, and pursuit of happiness.

* According to Eisenberg, "Number chasers" fall into four personality types:

--"Procrastinators" enter their forties and fifties ensconced in a cloud of avoidance and denial about the years ahead of them, or simply do not understand investing in their futures.

--"Pluckers" often lazily or arrogantly pull ephemeral, albeit specific, Numbers from thin air with little attention to developing a realistic and coherent plan to achieve their goals.

--"Plotters" crunch every practical aspect of their financial history, hoping to cement their Number in black and white, even at the expense of not having fun and leisure.

--"Probers" visualize their Numbers not as an end but as the means to pursuing dreams and passions, and completing inner and outer journeys to self-fulfillment.

* The current "Debt Warp" is the "silent Number killer that afflicts young and old" that has been brought on by our "whip-it-out credit-card culture."

* The "Lost Years" describes a person's 20s, 30s, and 40s wherein sensible financial foundation-building bows to oblivious and careless spending, and the tug-of-war dichotomy between the "old Rest of Your Life" and the "new Rest of Your Life."

* A surprise "Lifestyle Relapse" attack around retirement age can be induced by debt, aging, long term care, and self-absorption. Living longer and spending more, people will eventually experience dire consequences in response to the debt-drenched, expense account-driven lifestyles to which they have grown accustomed.

* The six tenets of the "Eisenberg Uncertainty Principles" outline the dubious state of living in a carpe diem-addicted, indebted culture with little financial guidance or responsibility.

* "Downshifting" is an important skill one needs to know how to do in the expanse between leaving a career and before death in order to maintain financial stability and a happy life.

Eisenberg's book is not an investment guide, but rather something wholly original: a revealing look behind our most common financial and emotional conflicts and how we can begin to get a grip on them. Eisenberg gives each reader a unique and unprecedented tool with which to virtually craft his or her future. This encompassing book is a priceless, step-by-step prelude to initiating, or continuing, discussions with a qualified financial advisor. The bottom line for The Number is that Eisenberg offers each reader a fresh and promising beginning to the rest of his or her life.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 100
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1 out of 5 stars The Number is a Big Fat Zero - Worthless   September 15, 2009
Glenn Gallagher (Sacramento, CA)
The Number is without a doubt, the worst financial planning book ever written. What a cynical rip-off. What a stinking pile of garbage. The author gives us no practical advice whatsoever. This book was a complete waste of my time and money. It's almost like the author wanted to prove he could pull off a giant practical joke, that some people will fall for anything (like buying this so-called book).

The entire waste of a book basically says "Make sure you have enough money saved up or promised to you (pension, social security) when you retire." That's all he says. No tips on how much is enough (we have to figure that out for ourselves). No advice on how to save up the necessary money. Not even a rule-of-thumb such as "you will need 85 percent of your working income to survive comfortably in retirement."

I have seen one-minute television commercials that were more informative than this piece of moldering compost. Please avoid this book if you can.



1 out of 5 stars Waste of time   March 30, 2009
iliketowatch
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I read one review here that warns us that "the publisher of this book employed bzzagent (paid word of mouth) many of whom seem to be posting here." I concur with all the one star reviews and as I read the five star reviews this is probably the sanest explanation that I can find for their bizzarrely inappropriate laudatory comments. Read the other 1 star reviews. Some summarise the book in a paragraph or two. More coherently than the book could dream of.

The book is a puffed out paragraph stretched out with scores of meaningless banal examples and charicatures. Go into a book shop, pick up this book and you will realise you should not waste your time buying it.

Save your money and skip this book. Look at how many second hand copies are being sold for 1 cent on Amazon already. And its not even worth that!! Even if you got this book for free you would be wasting your time reading it.



4 out of 5 stars An important read for anyone concerned about retiring   January 24, 2009
David S. Newman (Michigan)
This book is well worth the time to read, the tone is light but the message is very serious. It is an excellent book but to my tastes it could have been edited into a shorter volume.




1 out of 5 stars Dont Waste Your Time & Money   August 24, 2008
deac99 (Upstate NY)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

A total waste of paper - The author enjoys writing words, if you enjoy reading words go for it! If you want any guidance on aspects for retirement and saving for such, spend your time elsewhere - anywhere!


3 out of 5 stars The second half of the book is worth reading.   April 3, 2008
Willa I. Lewis (New York)
I found the first half or so of this book pretty worthless. General information abounds - save more, you'll need it, etc. etc. Nothing new here.

The author does, towards the latter part of the book, make some good points about each of us having to decide what is really important to us in terms of what kind of lifestyle, etc., might make us happy in the later part of our lives. How much money you need (The Number, as it were) is dependant upon how much YOU need to do what YOU want to do. So it does bring up some important issues. But it is no "how to" for retirement.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 100
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