Take a bite out of debt

Book Review: 'The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Out of Debt'

Inman News®

Image courtesy of <a href="http://us.penguingroup.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9781592578474,00.htm" target=blank>Penguin.com</a>.Image courtesy of Penguin.com.

Book Review
Title: "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Out of Debt"
Author: Ken Clark
Publisher: Penguin, 2009; 352 pages; $16.95

If years were keywords, perhaps 2009 was "frightened frugality." This year was all about belt-tightening in the face of a very uncertain financial future, for our nation and ourselves, as individual families and people. Now that we're on what most agree is the other side of the financial apocalypse, albeit just barely, my guess is that 2010 will be the first of perhaps several years of recovery for most Americans.

This year, everyone I knew hoarded their cash because they weren't sure what would happen next. Next year, most of us who haven't already done so will be putting an action plan in place to rebuild our finances, from the foundation up.

So what is the foundation of these new and improved personal finances so many of us will be building in 2010? Freedom from debt -- especially nasty credit card and other unsecured debt. In the world of credit cards, the 2009 keywords would be "skyrocketing rates" and "crazy-making unilateral terms changes." Accordingly, the 2010 keywords should be "pay it off" -- and "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Out of Debt," by certified financial planner Ken Clark, promises to provide "simple and effective solutions" to help us all pay it off and "(g)et back on firm financial footing."

My knee-jerk antipathy to any book whose purchase is equal to a deep insult to my own intelligence was stopped short by the back cover's assurance that "you're no idiot, of course." So, I gave it a chance. And if you're looking for a systematic, hopeful approach to resolving your own debt, you should too.

"The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Out of Debt" provides a simple, crystal-clear process and plan for, well, getting out of debt. It presents a set-by-step approach that sits right in the realistic, reasonable middle of the two extremes usually espoused by debt-elimination tutorials -- hard-core, complicated, time-consuming models that do not take into account the psychology of those who carry a lot of debt and their frustration potential at living on pork and beans to get rid of a few credit cards (on the one hand) and the life-consuming, psychoanalytic approach that focuses more on talk than on the action needed to mow through the bills. ...CONTINUED

Share with REmessenger

You must login or register to post a comment.