medium-paced
challenging informative medium-paced

I think this book something change my mind.
challenging emotional hopeful informative inspiring reflective relaxing medium-paced

This was a good book to start learning about the principle of money, the importance of money, how to think about money. The graphs are helpful to show how money should flow and it how it flows for the most of us. If you want to get a general idea on how to start thinking about how we should view money and how to get it to work for us then this is a good place to begin.
challenging informative inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

The fact that this guy dropped come bars and then became a scammer is peak capitalism I'm telling you
medium-paced

"Rich Dad, Poor Dad" is filled with invaluable wisdom and starts out with a very insightful story--almost like a parable--of his youth and his 'two dads.' Overall, the book's commentary on society--particularly societies in decline--is strangely prophetic. Kiyosaki definitely highlights Donald Trump way too much for me (which caused it to lose a star in my rating of this book, because I consider Trump to be a hack and a charlatan, and Kiyosaki puts him in the same category as General Patton and Warren Buffett, WTF?), but if you can get past the author’s misguided opinion of mango Mussolini, some of Kiyosaki's somewhat problematic (and also prescient/prophetic) ideas about capitalism and the decline of America, some or all of which might rub some people the wrong way for different reasons, he provides a super-important introduction to building wealth. Tony Robbins' "Unshakeable" and "Money: Master the Game" seem to take cues from Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad, Poor Dad." I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book, and for those who distrust unfettered capitalism, I would say to keep an open mind and read it anyway. You might learn something! Kiyosaki's challenging of conventional wisdom remains fresh even today.