The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to
True Riches
by Jeff Yeager, read by
the author
c.2007, Brilliance Audio • $29.95 • 7
CDs / approx. 8 hours
c.2008, Broadway
Book • $12.95 / $15.95 Canada • 242 pages
This
is the year you’re going to do it.
This
is the year you’re finally going to stop screwing around. Prices go up faster
than income does, but you’re going to buckle down and start putting money away,
buy a house, pay some bills, plan retirement.
But
man, it’s hard. You know there’s room
for improvement in your financial life, but – aside from brown-bagging and
other no-brainer money-savers – how can you bank some coin, painlessly?
You
can start by listening to “The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to True Riches”
by Jeff Yeager. Then, you can put Yeager’s ideas to good use and put some
serious money aside.
So
the excess of the holidays is over and you’ve had your fill of shopping. Yeager
says that’s good. You’ve reached your Enoughasaurus.
You
won’t feel deprived if you don’t spend.
Now you’re ready to live within your means.
And
that includes living with a less-than-palatial house. Yeager says that you
should consider a cheaper, smallish home or buy a duplex and let your house pay
for itself.
Think twice before doing extensive,
unnecessary remodeling. Learn to do repairs yourself.
Take
a fiscal fast, Yeager counsels. Set
aside a pre-determined time, usually a week, in which your goal is to
completely avoid spending money. Pay bills before or after your fiscal fast so
you aren’t cheating; then get creative. Yeager even advocates doing without
your car and without electricity, although he admits those efforts can be tough
to employ.
And
speaking of tough sacrifices, Yeager urges you to try living without your
vehicle completely. Bike or walk to work, or take public transportation. Ask
your employer if you can telecommute. If
you absolutely, positively need a car, buy used.
I
really enjoyed listening to “The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to True
Riches,” and I found plenty of easy-to-start, relatively pain-free ideas that
really can save money. But there are
three things you’ll want to know about this audiobook.
First
of all, there are words in this book that are not for little kids, so if you
planned on listening to this CD while driving them anywhere, be aware that you
might want to re-think that idea.
Second,
author Jeff Yeager reads his own work on this CD, which makes it much more
enjoyable, but also means that formulas and ideas whiz by at 50 miles-per-hour.
You’re
going to want to either write things down (impossible when driving) or consult
the paper form of this useful book.
Which
brings me to the third point: I found it highly ironic that it’s cheaper to buy
the paperback of this book about saving money than it is to buy the audio
version.
Much cheaper, in fact. Like, less than
half.
Still,
if you’re a multitasker who listens to audiobooks while driving, this one will make you slow down
in more ways than one.
If
you don’t need the CD, definitely get the book.
“The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to True Riches” could
set you on a great new financial highway this year.