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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's about content.
I've read the other reviews, and yes, I agree that Waxman would have been well served by having a better technical writer do a professional run-through to clean up the style. Releasing a well-edited second edition would be an improvement. That having been said, however, I agree with other reviewers that in CONTENT this book is well worth the investment and the read. If...
Published on August 2, 2006 by James N. Post

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Poorly and unprofessionally written, self-aggrandizing
This book never should have been published. It is one of the most poorly written (I daresay, ignorently written) books I have had the displeasure to encounter. The author has a big axe to grind about government, and is highly politicized. There may be kernals of information here, but I don't trust anything the author says. I doubt that the content was controlled with...
Published on March 21, 2006 by Laura Landy


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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Poorly and unprofessionally written, self-aggrandizing, March 21, 2006
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This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
This book never should have been published. It is one of the most poorly written (I daresay, ignorently written) books I have had the displeasure to encounter. The author has a big axe to grind about government, and is highly politicized. There may be kernals of information here, but I don't trust anything the author says. I doubt that the content was controlled with fact-checking, corroboration, or even basic editing. These bits may give you a sense of how the book goes:

"It has reached such a stage that the concept of private employment is now a joke. The Federal and State governments now control employment. Personnel Offices are now called Human Relations Departments--further signifying the encroachment of socialistic concepts."

Excuse me, but "HR" stands for Human Resources, not Human Relations. If the author doesn't know this, I question any other "information" he has to impart. Even scarier, exactly how is it that HR departments signify socialistic concepts? No logic here.

Or how about this one, which reveals the true reason for the book:

"Most of you have chosen through the purchase of this Book to convert to dual hat status or to assure that your own conversion has been done properly. However, self-help always has its own risks. As we have repeatedly stated, perhaps too often, [name of his business] offers a money back guarantee and certification procedure, whereby our IC Member Specialists will certify that you are an IC, which will protect you against any problems you may have with anybody over any question of the propriety of your IC status."

Hmmm, that's quite a claim, is it not? Sounds like a lot of hokey, to me.

And why, please tell me, is the word "Book" capitalized? (I found many incorrectly capitalized words throughout the text.)

The author is part of a group (probably a group of one) that offers "Independent Contract Specialist" certification. Oh, please. It's pretty clear that this book is primarily a marketing tool for his business.

It doesn't get any better. I suffered, trying to wade through his poor writing to get the concepts he offers, and gave up after a bit, realizing that I could get the information from more trustworthy, accurate, and palatable sources.

I can't resist ending with an excerpt from the back cover:

"This Book provides you with everything you need to know about independent contracting to beat the IRS. Actually, they are on our side on this. The Law is on Our side. It is written simply and understandably. It traces the history of our present employment system wage/slave trap from the first of the Independent Contractors, the members of the glorious Guilds of England. It provides you with all of the information you or your company needs to Break the Wage-Slave Chains and the payroll trap. Read the heretofore-untold story about how the Congressional passage of the Safe Harbor Test came about. It was a great victory for the American Public. Great cost saving stuff for individuals and companies. Join the Employment Revolution."

Save your money. Check out the Nolo books, which are written by professionals, kept up-to-date via their web site, and trustworthy.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's about content., August 2, 2006
By 
James N. Post (Albuquerque, NM, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
I've read the other reviews, and yes, I agree that Waxman would have been well served by having a better technical writer do a professional run-through to clean up the style. Releasing a well-edited second edition would be an improvement. That having been said, however, I agree with other reviewers that in CONTENT this book is well worth the investment and the read. If you are an employer or an employee and you want to know the pros and cons and how-tos of independent contracting vs. conventional employment, then you will not be disappointed with what there is to be learned by reading this book. Having read it, you will be in a position to create a good relationship with contractors, the local authorities, and the IRS, and you will know what to ask them, and what to tell them. Forgive the style; it is good data.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Potentially useful, but approach with caution, December 28, 2005
By 
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
Writers Club Press is a publish-on-demand vanity press, so this book has not been through the normal editorial and fact-checking procedures of similar books from established publishing houses. The lack of editing shows in the writing style of the first several chapters, which read like an advertising brochure for the author's law practice. The author also has the irritating tendency to use self-coined two-letter acronyms throughout without explaining them the first time they come up (he includes a list in the very front of the book, instead, which makes for lots of flipping back and forth). In between the "I can set this up for you" comments, though, is some potentially useful information, stated in easy-to-understand terms.

Given that this stuff is just one guy's word, though, no matter how qualified this one guy appears to be (anybody can write anything and get it out there if they're self-publishing), you'll want to corroborate this information with other sources before you act on it. Of course, deciding to start an independent career and be your own boss is a big enough and complex enough decision that it'd be a good idea to do that kind of fact-checking regardless of the information source. Even if everything in this book is up-to-date and %100 accurate, you'd still need to find somebody (other than Waxman) to guide you on local and state legal issues, and would be well-advised to find good, qualified local financial advisor, as well. It simply isn't possible to put "all anybody needs to know" about the subject into one book.

The forms and abridged IRS documents included in the second half of the book look very useful and will probably be the handiest parts of the book.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All Anybody Needs To Know About Independent Contracting, May 1, 2003
By 
William H. Bradley (South Haven, MI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
The title says it all. It really is "all anybody needs to know about independent contracting." You can be an independent contractor in any line of business. So, if the idea of being your own boss and saving some money in the process appeals to you, or even if you are just curious, you own it to yourself to read this book. Packed full of details, with forms, instructions and worksheets, the book walks you through the process, from deciding if you even want to be an independent contractor, through setting up your records, getting started and where to go for additional help if you need it. I wish this book had been around when I started contracting 50 years ago.
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A practical, easy-to-follow, effective resource, July 18, 2003
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
Written by business attorney Shelly Waxman for the non-specialist general reader, All Anybody Needs To Know About Independent Contracting is an informed and informative guide to capitalizing on the Employment Revolution to escape the traps of wage-slavery and excessive taxes. From the necessary requirements to fulfill for independent contractor status, to tax saving tips, to protocols for setting up one's business, All Anybody Needs To Know About Independent Contracting is commended as being a practical, easy-to-follow, effective resource for readers of all educational or business backgrounds.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All Anybody Needs To Know About Independent Contracting, May 1, 2003
By 
William H. Bradley (South Haven, MI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
The title says it all. It really is "all anybody needs to know about independent contracting." You can be an independent contractor in any line of business. So, if the idea of being your own boss and saving some money in the process appeals to you, or even if you are just curious, you own it to yourself to read this book. Packed full of details, with forms, instructions and worksheets, the book walks you through the process, from deciding if you even want to be an independent contractor, through setting up your records, getting started and where to go for additional help if you need it. As a former contractor, now retired, I just wish this book had been available when I started out.
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5 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reduce the fear factor, September 19, 2003
By 
Michael Linksvayer (Sunnyvale, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
Whether you're an employee looking to become an independent contractor or a businessperson looking to use the same, Waxman does a good job (hah!) of explaining the hows, whats, and whys. This easy read will comfort and inform as you prepare to make the leap.
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4 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb How To Do it, February 25, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: ALL Anybody Needs to Know About Independent Contracting: With Forms, Instructions and Other Helpful Items (Paperback)
Just as Athena sprang fully-grown from the head of Zeus, Shelly Waxman's new book, "All Anybody Needs To Know About Independent Contracting" comes complete, with everything you need to know. Shelly learned about this specialty in tax law from the total victory of his client told in Chapter 11 of his tour de force memoirs,"In the Teeth of the Wind: A Study of Power and how to Fight It."
I fervently hope this means that Shelly will be writing a new book from each chapter of his memoirs. If you still don't know that your life and liberty are being sacrificed as an offering on the altar of the State, you need to read both books. If you are sufficiently aware of the perils that pertain to your personal existence, then you need to start planning your escape to freedom.
Shelly's latest book is the first place to look for that start. Tread Deeply and Fear not! There are no passages of incomprehensible prose or legalese to wade through. This book is disarmingly user friendly.
Not only is the language easy to comprehend, this book takes the notion of user friendly to new heights by encouraging all readers to act according to its directions, while, at the same time, dispelling misinformation about any bad consequences of doing so. And, again, this is complete, in the sense that Waxman tells you in no uncertain terms why you need to take this action now.
With all the faulty legal literature strewn about the Internet and in hard copy from dubious sources claiming to be counsellors of law, although not admitted to the bar, Attorney Waxman's books fill the void with comprehensive, comprehensible, competent legal literature that you can use for yourself and by yourself.
For Liberty in Our Lifetime, R.J. Tavel, J.D, Founder: Freedomlaw.com Liberty's Educational Advocacy Forum
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