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The Credit Diet
How to Shed Unwanted Debt and Achieve Fiscal Fitness
by 
John Fuhrman
  
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Subject(s):  Business
Nonfiction
Language(s):  English

Format Information

Adobe PDF eBook add to cart
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   1437 KB
ISBN:   9780471445951
Release date:   Dec 18, 2002

Description

"You'll treasure the practical insights and the useful tips in this book. You'll think differently, act smarter, and increase your wealth by learning John Furhman's ideas."

-Nido R. Qubein

Chairman, Great Harvest Bread Co.

Founder, National Speakers Association Foundation



It's no big surprise that each year thousands of people fall into debt. What is shocking is that many of us accept the fact that we could be in debt for the rest of our lives. John Fuhrman should know because he has been there, but he decided to put a plan together that would eliminate debt from his life for good.



In The Credit Diet: How to Shed Unwanted Debt and Achieve Fiscal Fitness, award-winning speaker and bestselling author John Fuhrman uses his personal life experience of overcoming debt to provide you with a practical and easy-to-follow road map that will help you to rise above your current financial situation and take the necessary action to remove debt from your life.

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Reviews

Kenny Boy...
While Silver takes a humorous look at wrongdoing, political commentator Arianna Huffington provides a more sobering approach in her indictment of big corporations, Pigs at the Trough: How Corporate Greed and Political Corruption Are Undermining America (Crown, Jan.) There are light-hearted moments, however, including Huffington's P.I.Q. Test, which includes multiple choice questions on such subjects as the name of Bernie Ebbers's 60-foot yacht (Aquasition) and George W. Bush's nickname for pal Kenneth Lay
 
Publishers Weekly, December 23, 2002...
In another Crown title out next month, Sweet Potato Boss Queen Jill Conner Browne provides plenty of food for thought on finance, and just about everything else, in her third collection of words of wisdom, The Sweet Potato Queens' Big-Ass Cookbook (and Financial Planner). Among the tips not to be found in, say, the Wall Street Journal are: "Rich old people are generally more attractive than poor old people, so by all means, try to get rich before age sets in. Otherwise, you'll just be playing catch-up for the rest of your life and that will just wear you out." Intermingled with bon mots are recipes for comfort foods like Pig Candy (bacon, brown sugar, chopped pecans) and Fried Dill Pickles.

For those whose finances could benefit from slenderizing, John Furhman offers a debt-loss plan, The Credit Diet: How to Shed Unwanted Debt and Achieve Fiscal Fitness (Wiley, Jan.), based on real examples and personal experience. -- J.R.
 

Digital Rights Information

Adobe PDF eBook
Copy:  allowed, but limited to 10 times every 7 days
Print:  allowed with no limitations