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The financial diet : a total beginner's guide to getting good with money /

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Henry Holt and Company, [2018]Edition: First editionDescription: 197 pages : color illustrations ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781250176165
  • 1250176166
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 332.024 23
LOC classification:
  • HG179 .F324 2018
Contents:
Budgeting -- Investing -- Career -- Food -- Home -- Love -- Action.
Summary: "The Financial Diet is the personal finance book for people who don't care about personal finance. Whether you're in need of an overspending detox, buried under student debt, or just trying to figure out how to live on an entry-level salary, The Financial Diet gives you tools to make a budget, understand investments, and deal with your credit." -- Book jacket.
List(s) this item appears in: Focus on finance
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Adult Nonfiction Coeur d'Alene Library Book 332.024 FAGAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610021124248
Standard Loan Hayden Library Adult Nonfiction Hayden Library Book 332.02/FAGAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610021522466
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

*A Refinery29 Best Book of 2018*
*One of Real Simple's Most Inspiring Books for Graduates*
*Indie Personal Finance Bestseller*

How to get good with money, even if you have no idea where to start.

The Financial Diet is the personal finance book for people who don't care about personal finance. Whether you're in need of an overspending detox, buried under student debt, or just trying to figure out how to live on an entry-level salary, The Financial Diet gives you tools to make a budget, understand investments, and deal with your credit. Chelsea Fagan has tapped a range of experts to help you make the best choices for you, but she also knows that being smarter with money isn't just about what you put in the bank. It's about everything--from the clothes you put in your closet, to your financial relationship habits, to the food you put in your kitchen (instead of ordering in again). So The Financial Diet gives you the tools to negotiate a raise and the perfect cocktail recipe to celebrate your new salary.

The Financial Diet will teach you:
* how to get good with money in a year.
* the ingredients everyone needs to have a budget-friendly kitchen.
* how to talk about awkward money stuff with your friends.
* the best way to make (and stick to!) a budget.
* how to take care of your house like a grown-up.
* what the hell it means to invest (and how you can do it).

Budgeting -- Investing -- Career -- Food -- Home -- Love -- Action.

"The Financial Diet is the personal finance book for people who don't care about personal finance. Whether you're in need of an overspending detox, buried under student debt, or just trying to figure out how to live on an entry-level salary, The Financial Diet gives you tools to make a budget, understand investments, and deal with your credit." -- Book jacket.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Introducing financial concepts with a light touch, Fagan, cofounder of the Financial Diet website, begins with her own story of bad financial behavior and its costs both financially and to her peace of mind. Fagan leads millennials and Generation Zers-the tone and content of the book are clearly aimed at the generations born after 1980-through building a solid understanding of finances and how money affects all areas of life, from one's career to one's romantic life. Offering the expected topics of credit, investing, and retirement savings and a sparse glossary of financial terms, this slender book succeeds best as a life guide. Fagan elevates her book above other beginner guides by showing how finances and aspects of lifestyle such as diet and your relationship with money intertwine. In short interviews, experts give out sound advice in their areas of expertise, including on saving, deciding when buying a home makes sense, and knowing when to spend money. In a section useful to those just starting out on their own, after discussing renting versus owning and the cost savings of being able to do basic repairs, a list of tools and their uses is given, and why you'll need them. The breezy lifestyle-magazine-like writing style and easy-to-digest layout make this guide a useful and readable resource. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Booklist Review

Based on Fagan's popular blog, The Financial Diet TFD for short this book dispenses practical, no-nonsense financial advice, with balance as a key ingredient for success. Fagan shoots straight about her own experiences as an irresponsible teen with a credit card. Luckily, she avoided some common hang-ups for most millennials, including student loans. In time, Fagan and her team eventually decided to get good with money and work toward healthier relationships with it. Hence, the diet. Bringing together experts from varying fields, including career planners, mortgage experts, financial bloggers, and money and relationship writers is par for the course. The mix of savvy, open, and mostly female perspectives on personal finance are what make this a winner. Additionally, Fagan excels at encouraging conversations about money, which she emphasizes as crucial for young women in their careers and relationships, and in caring for their future selves. Whip-smart, collaborative, and mindful, The Financial Diet dispenses timeless advice that goes above and beyond asking readers to give up their avocado toast.--Jones, Courtney Copyright 2017 Booklist

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Chelsea Fagan is a writer and the cofounder of popular website and YouTube channel "The Financial Diet." After not graduating from college, she began her writing career at Thought Catalog, where she spent three years before starting The Financial Diet as a personal blog in August of 2014. In between, she's written for dozens of outlets, including The Atlantic , Cosmopolitan , VICE , and Grantland , and published a first book, I'm Only Here for the WiFi .

Lauren Ver Hage is an art director and the cofounder of The Financial Diet living and working in New York City. She graduated from Ramapo College of New Jersey with a major in visual communication design, and from there worked as an art director at an advertising agency and a freelance designer for Nickelodeon, before moving on to cofound The Financial Diet .

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