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365 Ways to Live Cheap: Your Everyday Guide to Saving Money

Product Type: Book
Product Price: $7.95
Manufacturer: Adams Media
Purchase
Description
Use cold water for most clothes washing and save up to $63 a year. Minimize your carload and reduce your gas mileage by as much as 5 percent. Invest in a deep freezer and fill it up with meat discounted at 30 percent or more.
Take a look at your life and you'll realize that there's almost always a way to make do on less. This book offers up a bevy of ways to cut down on costs and still enjoy a satisfying lifestyle in any situation. From practicing good gas conservation habits to learning to love leftovers, this book will help every aspiring penny pincher stop the unnecessary spending and find the fun in frugality!
Reviews
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-04-18
Summary: "Common sense is not all that common"
Common sense is not all that common. Everyone needs a starting point. Many, many years ago books like this were my mainstay. It is full of thought provoking basic principles that can be transferred to other areas like reuse, repair, repurpose and make do.
If you understand that "tie your shoe laces so you don't trip on them" can be a lesson in stretching the life of what you have invested in by taking care of it then you can apply that to everything you own from your car to your hair brush. These transferrable principles where what made the Tightwad Gazette such a hit after all.
It seems that the vast majority of us are perceived to have surpassed this stage in our lives but I don't believe most of us have. With the state of the economy how can one even assume that "most" people are beyond this material? We wouldn't be in the overextended financial hell we are in right now if we were.
This book isn't going to have you seeing choirs of angels but it will be the jumping off point for many frugal financial epiphanies to come if you read it thoughtfully and apply the deeper lessons it tries to reveal.
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-01-03
Summary: "Lots of ideas"
This book gives you plenty of ideas to save money and enjoy life more. Sure, about half the ideas are obvious but others are very valuable. This book is worth 100x or more its price.
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2009-06-12
Summary: "Frugalites Glean All You Can, Then Pass It On To A Spendthrift Friend"
Like many other pennypinchers, I have been frugal my whole life. Well, half of my life it was enforced by my adoptive parents, farmers who took it for granted that the practice of thrift was the only way to achieve a life with the greatest amount of ease.
Thrift we had but name brand designer jeans we didn't. In my college years I dreamt of an adulthood that mirrored our spendthrift culture. However the experiences of my adult life have proven my parents correct. Despite the pipedreams we are sold on TV and in fashion magazines, at some time in most people's lives they are going to need to practice economy. However, few of us are taught how to think rationally about our spending. Seeing your pain incites famous fruggies such as Trent Hamm to publish, either online or in book format, usually what amounts to a list of ideas that have worked for him and others.
Frugalites from way back will read Hamm's small compilation of thrifty tips and and mutter "been there, done that." But this book isn't written for you. Astonishingly there are folks who are puzzled about how a library card works and who have never even gone grocery shopping with a list! Forget a meal plan. "Who has time for that?!" they yipe and then walk away worrying how to make that car payment.
Each section has a line item list of tips, something I thought made for a more efficient read. You can read all of the way through, or you can glance at the chapter headings and cherrypick those items that are new to you.
Pennypinchers will read this book since we are quite resourceful in gathering any nuggets that enhance the practice of our art. But hopefully this book's outreach will extend on into mainstream non-thrifties who in our times of economic anxiety may be more open to hearing that showing off status items bought on credit cannot provide the peace that comes from having your financial house in order.
Pinch your pennies, stash your cash, but definitely don't hoard good advice. When you have gleaned all you can pass the book on to a spendthrift friend next time you hear complaints about that hefty car payment.
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2009-06-04
Summary: "A cheap little checklist that shoud help you save"
A concise list of actions you can take to save money everyday. But making your own laundry and dish powder is going too far. And the Monthly Home Maintenance Schedule on pages 148-150 is too long and daunting. At the end of that long list Trent Hamm should have added: "or you could consider selling your house and buying a condominium".
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2009-04-15
Summary: "Groundbreaking? No. Good book? Certainly."
What the one-star reviews seem to say is that this book only offers tips that are available elsewhere. That's true.
But if a book needs to have completely new information to be worth reading, then practically every book on cooking, marketing, small business, investing, fitness, taxation, self-improvement, etc would be a waste of time and money. *All* of that information is available for free somewhere on the web.
365 Ways to Live Cheap won't be life changing, but if you read it with an open mind you should easily be able to pick up a handful of tips worth trying--each of which would likely recover the $7 the book cost.
