24 February 2014

Review of The Total Money Makeover

4. The Total Money Makeover (Dave Ramsey)

Pleasure: 5/10 Stars
Utility: 10/10 Stars

I'm inspired! For the first time in my life I feel like I'm not flying in the blind financially! Dave Ramsey's "The Total Money Makeover" provided me with a set of tools that were easy to understand and extremely logical. At the same time, it was not a cold, calculating, purely left-brained manual on how to handle personal finances. Mr. Ramsey seemed very much in touch with the emotional issues that come with handling money and debt and he did not scoff at them. He knew that finances often come with fear, anger, discouragement and confusion. So he interspersed his financial guidance with stories of people who were in a similar situation as I am, put these tools into practice and saw real change come about. In the final chapter, he even made sure to let people know that financial security and wealth are not the end-all-be-all in life and that reforming our money-handling habits should help us to see that money isn't everything. Throughout the book, I thought of another title I'd read on finances entitled "Money, Possessions and Eternity" (Randy Alcorn) and in the last chapter, I was stunned to see Mr. Ramsey mention this book and endorse it as containing good advice. How many financial advisors recommend giving away large sums of money on a regular basis? Not too many! I highly, highly recommend this book to any of my friends and family who have not read it. It's one that I will be returning to multiple times and I progress through this plan.

04 February 2014

Review of Jane Eyre

3. Jane Eyre (Charlotte Brontë)

Pleasure: 8/10 Stars
Utility: 1/10 Stars

There are books that aid you in the process of living and books that make that process mean something. Jane Eyre is in the latter group. As Glen Holland (the fictional main character in Mr. Holland's Opus) once observed, "...you can cut the arts as much as you want... [but] sooner or later, these kids aren't gonna have anything to read or write about."

I had a hard time reading through this book. There were stretches that were quite boring to me. But the problem does not lie in the book. It's a terrific book. Wonderful! Marvelous! Nuanced! Moving, tearful, horrifying, suspenseful, full of mystery and intrigue! No, the problem does not lie in the book. It's a terrific composition. The problem lies in me. The problem lies in our society. We are a people addicted to instant gratification, brevity and excitement. We are a superficial people. We have largely lost our ability to be patient, to meditate and to consider things of depth. And Jane Eyre requires those 3 things.

The story as a whole is a look at Jane's soul which, though it has encountered very little but pain, suffering,  and horror, has kept its integrity. Jane refuses time and again to compromise her virtues and convictions in order to find acceptance or love. It is this constant refusal to allow herself to be corrupted that makes the ending so wonderfully tearful when she at last is able to be joined to one who loves her. If you read this one, you may need a box of tissues. It'll make you laugh out loud (on rare occasions), think, cry, and be freaked out.