Amazon.com Review
A cheerful approach to all things financial plus playful photo collages and colorful drawings make up this fact-filled compendium of everything kids could possibly need to know about money--and more. Neale S. Godfrey, a nationally recognized expert on kids and money, and illustrator Randy Verougstraete tell the story of money--from bartering to investing--with animated appeal. Each subject receives careful and lively attention: the history of money; earning, saving, and spending money; banking facts and bank account information; credit card explanations and warnings ("It's In-credit-ible!"); information about America's economic structure and the government's economic role; taxes; the laws of supply and demand; inflation and depression; and stocks and bonds. Fun financial trivia is interspersed throughout, and word problems and matching games complete each of the nine chapters.
Godfrey does a fine job of covering complicated concepts, successfully tying her explanations with kids' everyday experiences (for example, creating a business plan for a dog-walking service). Kids will enjoy learning about finances with this easy-to-digest format, and grown-ups may be surprised to learn a thing or two as well. This book is about as far from dull gray, boring, banking as it gets. (Ages 8 to 12) --Ericka Lutz
From Publishers Weekly
Godfrey (Money Doesn't Grow on Trees), a syndicated columnist and former president of The First Women's Bank, appears to know kids as well as she knows finance. Rather than delving into detail in any area, her chatty, pun- and trivia-filled narrative touches on a broad range of topics: the history of money, budgeting, banking accounts, credit cards, supply and demand, starting a business, taxes, the stock market and other investment choices. Information is presented in brief, easily absorbed blocks of text, surrounded by extended captions, comments from characters, etc. Numerous sidebars include some with recurring themes. Under the heading "Word Bank," for example, Godfrey defines finance-related vocabulary (promissory note, entrepreneur); under "A Penny for Your Thoughts," she challenges readers to consider various money matters ("Would you rather buy stocks or keep your money in a savings account?"); and under "Take Your Pick," she offers some speculative questions and math puzzlers. On occasion, Godfrey stretches the idea of reader participation a bit thin (as when she asks readers to "imagine that you're a check" and to describe whom they meet and any trouble they encounter). Yet for the most part, Godfrey's light-handed approach?reinforced by Verougstraete's sometimes silly cartoon and collage art?is right on the money. Ages 8-12.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
See all Editorial Reviews