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| Thou Shall Prosper: Ten Commandments for Making Money | 
enlarge | Author: Rabbi Daniel Lapin Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $13.66 You Save: $11.29 (45%)
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (34 reviews) Sales Rank: 2996
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.6 x 1.1
ISBN: 0471710237 Dewey Decimal Number: 296.364 EAN: 9780471710233 ASIN: 0471710237
Publication Date: July 15, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
  Thou Shall Prosper: Ten Commandents For Making Money March 11, 2006 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
This author can teach you something on making money and itsrelationships in business. Rabbi Daniel Lapin is is highly educated in school and in the practical world and can explain the money theroes and workings in an understandable way.
  Both Entertaining and Useful April 17, 2003 32 out of 35 found this review helpful
Thou Shall Prosper by Rabbi Daniel Lapin is an excellent book that covers three general subject areas: self-help, personal finance and career development. Basically, the author gives advice in a series of commandments on "making money" where he sprinkles in Jewish wisdom. There is a great deal of useful advice that would have proved especially timely for many professionals in 2001. It does not offer a great deal of assistance dealing with short term cash generation. Rather, the author aims to give readers life-long direction with the goal of building wealth.The underlying theme of this book is that wealth creation is fundamentally virtuous because it creates wealth and prosperity for your neighbors. Moreover, he stresses the value of money and why it is such an important element of society. His suggestions range from the subtle such as how to carry yourself to more profound concepts such as never aiming to retire. The book is filled with interesting stories intended to reinforce his ideas. These include a 70 year old forklift driver who earns a six figure income through extensive overtime only to give the money away to charity. Another is a sales representative relative who likes to drive around to far-flung locations in his Rolls Royce. While very entertaining, the book has its shortcomings. Rabbi Lapin glosses over how large segments of the economy do in fact operate with minimal honesty. Oddly, he even suggests not being entirely honest as it is not socially acceptable. Like Evangelical Christian preachers, he draws some pretty far-fetched conclusions about the meaning of specific bible versus. The passages he selects support the virtuousness of earning a living. Any intelligent person can read several different meanings in the selections, so I would have to suggest that this approach won't convince many readers of his arguments. This isn't to mean the general ideas aren't strong, just the supporting passages. He also makes some highly questionable scientific claims. For example, he argues that watching movies instead of reading books is detrimental to your creativity because reading allows one to creatively develop images instead of having a director create them for you. Despite its flaws, I personally found the book very, very interesting. If you like books such How to Win Friends and Influence People and Daniel Goleman's Primal Leadership, you will probably enjoy Thou Shall Prosper a great deal.
  Daniel Lapin - map maker January 1, 2003 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
This is much more than a "self-improvement" book. It is a stand-alone Daniel Lapin "guide to the perplexed." It is a beautiful fusion of goals, skill sets and disciplines that, if perceived and applied diligently, can lead not only to "riches," but to the full realization of a well-rounded life that in itself is rich, and therefore may be the path to economic well being and even wealth. It is a wakeup call to would-be capitalists to this country's God-given economic system that should not only be embraced enthusiastically but proudly. It is an antidote to socialistic bromides and guilt trips. It is a road map to the delicious fruits of ethical capitalism.
  Outstanding advice and wisdom November 11, 2002 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
In "Thou Shall Prosper," Rabbi Daniel Lapin offers access to the timeless principles that Jews have understood and applied to business and finance for centuries. Both engaging and full of practical advice, this book is a pleasure to read and sheds light on the keys to personal and economic prosperity. Highly Recommended!
  Ancient secrets of Jewish prosperity made accessible to all. November 8, 2002 19 out of 19 found this review helpful
There is at least one brilliant insight on almost every page of this unusual book. The author is braver than most business and personal succeess book writers. The rabbi is willing to say that you can't increase your wealth long term by merely accumulating a collection of clever tricks. Instead you actually have to become a different person. He doesn't say it because this is a finance book not a religious book but I sense that what he is dancing around is almost a 'being born again experience'. You have to help yourself be 'reborn' as a proud, confident, friendly, trustworthy business professional. Well he is right and my experiences with his advice prove it for me. Lapin comes close to perpetuating the old anti-Semitic canard about Jews being good with money, but he does effectively condense the ancient wisdom that puts far more Jews onto the Forbes 400 list than their population figures would suggest. This is a life-changing book and one that not only can make one more financially successful but can also help one integrate one's money earning activities with one's sense of values and convictions. You'll find yourself, like me, reading it and rereading it. Great value!
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