Money Changes Everything: Twenty-Two Writers Tackle the Last Taboo with Tales of Sudden Windfalls, Staggering Debts, and Other Surprising Turns of Fortune
by Jenny Offill, Elissa SchappellSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of Money Changes Everything: Twenty-Two Writers Tackle the Last Taboo with Tales of Sudden Windfalls, Staggering Debts, and Other Surprising Turns of Fortune.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 40)
bookshelves:
american-socioeconomics,
memoir,
non-fiction,
z-read-in-2000s
Read in April, 2008
I really liked most of these. Sometimes I have trouble rating collections, whether by one or several authors; invariably some stories are good and some are less good. So this time I made a point of rating each one of the 22 (true) stories here 1-5. The resulting average was 3.68, lower than I would have expected because overall, I would rate the collection at least 4, and probably 4.5 if we had half stars in this thing.
Anyway, as long as I've already bothered to do them (and the WorldCat r...more
Anyway, as long as I've already bothered to do them (and the WorldCat r...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
other nonfiction devotees
Another anthology by the authors who wrote "The Friend who Got Away." Thought it was really cheap to have the husband and wife team each write an article, and not have them be located back to back. They were way too similar to belong in the same compilation. Most of the stories, however, were fairly riveting-although Daniel Handler's about the $1200 bottle of wine just came across as though he was pretensious and defensive, a bad combination.
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bookshelves:
money
Read in September, 2007
Essays of varying interest on money, by writers. A 9/11 widow ends up with millions sent to her by total strangers and struggles with how to use it. Indian women are bilked from their family's wealth by the men in the family. Daniel Handler spends thee $1200 he gets for his essay on a bottle of wine.
Talking about one's own money is taboo, so it was interesting in a way to read many case studies of different people's situations.
Talking about one's own money is taboo, so it was interesting in a way to read many case studies of different people's situations.
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4 comments
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
Not really anyone
Eh.... Could have been much more interesting, but was only mildly so. I was at the least expecting some really entertaining tales of being broke and doing crazy things to make it, but no such luck. In the book, authors write essays about their relationship to money, some rich, some poor, most somewhere in between. I think my reading time could be better spent.
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
rubberneckers, curtain-twitchers
Hm. I guess I expected something else from this book -- I thought it'd be more about writers and how money affected their writing lives. While the writing quality was okay, it was difficult for me to get around my disappointment. Ah, well.
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bookshelves:
essays,
nonfiction
Interesting essays about money--the book is refreshing because so few people talk openly and honestly about money. Unfortunately, the quality and interest level of the essays was too uneven to give this book more than 3 stars.
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Read in February, 2008
Didn't seem to break many taboos, or much raise my interest either.
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