The life coach that I'm working with recommended this book for me to read. I read the first 5 chapters since those are the ones that have the exercises for you to figure out what floats your boat. The exercises laid out make sense and I believe if you really follow through, you will discover many things about yourself.
One thing I didn't like was the swipes that the author, Pamela Slim, keeps taking at Timothy Ferris, author of The Four-Hour Workweek. Mostly they are snide little snarky barbs which seems to indicate to me that she didn't really read his book, as she accuses people of not doing with "Do What You Love, The Money Will Follow" by Barbara Sher. Aside from that, I think it's a great and very helpful book.
The rest of the book is focused toward people starting their own business. Since I'm not doing that right now, or possibly ever after completing my self-discovery journey, I passed on reading it.
I highly recommend this book.
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05/01/10: I did end up reading a few more chapters, mostly skimming and hopping around; and that decided me to change my ranking from 4 stars to 3. It's obvious that Pamela Slim prefers everything completely planned out to the nth degree, written on exhaustive lists and takes things very literally. (Which, if you are starting a business, is good.) Among the the additional chapters I read I found more swipes at other authors. Personally I think that when someone begins a sentence with "I don't mean any disrespect...", disrespect is exactly what they mean. While everyone is entitled to their opinions and biases, I don't think it's professional to tear down other people to make your point look better. Slim mentions that she went to the Martha Beck life coaching training and worships the ground Ms. Beck walks on. Yet tearing down other authors left a bad taste in my mouth for Ms. Slim and her mentor's teachings, even though they have very great value in helping a person define what it is they want to do in life. IMHO, a better approach to mentioning other books would have been to say that the other books are great at giving you the possibilities for your life and if you need more of a step-by-step approach, you'll find it here in my book.
Also I've read many books put out by Penquin Publishers and have not been exceptionally impressed by their editing before publication. I found a sentence that made no sense whatsoever, no matter how many times I re-read it and a placeholder for a table insertion.
I still recommend this book, and will, myself, be working through some of the exercises in the earlier chapters to help figure out the direction I want to pursue next. My recommendation: read many of the books on the market and take what you need from each. No one person has all the answers.