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woozled 's review for:
More of a 3.5, but I'm rounding up because it's an interesting perspective from someone who's older and from a much different upbringing than I am.
One thing I particularly appreciate is the wisdom without the arrogance. Instead of the typical narrative of shaming millenials, the author chooses to view millenials as capable of empowering themselves. Or at least that's what I'd like to think.
Overall, the book gets a 3.5 from me because 1) there are few things in this book that I haven't thought about before, 2) as a workaholic with decent savings and job, the work aspect I'm more worried about is less getting started, and more about defining it [fwp I know], and 3) what does the author have to say about those of us who have legitimately considered the partnership-and-eventual-family route... and rejected the idea of it?
Edit: Rounded down to a 3 bc I remembered how preachy, bairen, and fwp it is.
One thing I particularly appreciate is the wisdom without the arrogance. Instead of the typical narrative of shaming millenials, the author chooses to view millenials as capable of empowering themselves. Or at least that's what I'd like to think.
Overall, the book gets a 3.5 from me because 1) there are few things in this book that I haven't thought about before, 2) as a workaholic with decent savings and job, the work aspect I'm more worried about is less getting started, and more about defining it [fwp I know], and 3) what does the author have to say about those of us who have legitimately considered the partnership-and-eventual-family route... and rejected the idea of it?
Edit: Rounded down to a 3 bc I remembered how preachy, bairen, and fwp it is.