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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Financial Fuel for your financial engine.,
By brodiejohn@hotmail.com (Detroit, Michigan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Richest Man in Babylon/As a Man Thinketh (Audio Cassette)
"A part of all you earn is yours to keep." "But, isn't all mine to keep!" "No, you must pay the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker", said Arkad, the Richest Man in Babylon. If one should read this book and not accumulate something while he/she is in their productive years, then there has truly been a failure born upon this planet called Earth. None of us are borned to be failures. Situations and circumstances toss us around so, and buffet us about so, until we lose our fight, our will to try, and to win. But, George Clason takes us back to Babylon, and ancient city known for its' wealth, and culture. Arkad, the central character of the story, would be known as a Bill Gates, or an Admon Cashogi, or a J. Paul Getty, or an Aristotle Onassis of our time. The way Clason has written this book, you can and should imagine yourself right there in that time, attending Arkad's classes, and doing the homework he assign to lifts men from poverty and misery, to wealth, and happiness, and success. |
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Richest Man in Babylon/As a Man Thinketh by George S. Clason (Audio Cassette - June 1990)
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