Much of my copy of this self-improvement book is underlined and dog-eared (many good quotations, many good ideas), as I follow the writer through his advice about how we should build our lives around four cornerstones: "me" (our personal way of thinking), "we" (relationships), "do" (priorities), and "be" (progress).
Ultimately, though, I question the worth of much of the advice, considering the source. The author is from conservative Orange County and he frequently lets his conservative bias show. Strike one is when he boasts about taking his children on his business trips--but he says nothing about child care arrangements.
Strike two and three is when he unnecessarily shows his personal politics, first when he goes out of his way to make Rudy Guiliani look good and later when he fails to take all facts into consideration as he nearly rants about his views of the O. J. Simpson case.
Strike four is when he discusses 9/11 and offers an out-of-place platitude about "peaceful people will triumph over terrorism and good over evil," as if he's blithely unaware of just how much war and evil the United States has sown in the aftermath of 9/11. All this makes me wonder just how good his self-improvement advice can be, if he falls so short of considering the whole picture, and fails to account for his own bias, so often.
For further reading, the author suggests a number of classics in the field of self-improvement. To look at these titles is to better understand how the cornerstones of this book are defined.
For the early portion, there's Stephen Covey's "The Seven Habits of Highly Successful People" and Norman Vincent Peale's "The Power of Positive Thinking."
For the "We" cornerstone, there's "How to Win Friends and Influence People" by Dale Carnegie and "The One-minute Manager" by Spencer Johnson and Kenneth Blanchard."
For the "Do" cornerstone, there's "Think and Grow Rich" by Napoleon Hill, and "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" by Robert Kiyosaki and Sharon Lechter.
For the "Be" cornerstone, I find the author's recommendations fall short. I'd consider material he references in his text but not in his recommendations--those would be the writings of Benjamin Franklin, and "Man's Search for Meaning" by Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl.