Top mortgage secrets exposed
Book Review: 'Homebuyers Beware'
By Tara-Nicholle Nelson, Tuesday, November 17, 2009.
Image courtesy of FT Press.Book Review
Title: "Homebuyers Beware: Who's Ripping You Off Now? What You Must Know About the New Rules of Mortgage and Credit"
Author: Carolyn Warren
Publisher: FT Press, 2009; 288 pages; $17.99 list ($13.59 on amazon.com)
If you read this column often, you know how I feel about the fear-mongering approach we so often see in today's real estate and mortgage how-tos. It's hard for me to get behind any "advice" that attempts to position real estate consumers and their advisers in an adversarial face-off, or seeks to further foment the division and paranoia already pervading the real estate ether.
My sense is that the most paranoid buyers are not necessarily the ones who save the most money and get the best deals. In fact, I've seen paranoia cause people to make poor, panic-based decisions and incorrectly suspect very well-intentioned advisers of steering them wrong, alienating themselves from all the legitimate folks and essentially delivering themselves into the hands of the folks they should really be avoiding.
Whew -- glad I got that out.
But why am I going there here? Well, at first glance, "Homebuyers Beware: What You Must Know About the New Rules of Mortgage and Credit" positions itself to take that paranoia-cultivating approach. In bold red and black, the cover inquires "Who's Ripping You Off Now?" and elsewhere promises to "(e)xpose new secrets, lies and scams the mortgage industry doesn't want you to know about."
This I don't love. And outside of the fact that it is eye-catching and might be argued to enhance the book's sales, I don't really get it. It's not the most unique approach, and the author, Carolyn Warren, is in fact a player in the mortgage industry and throughout the book mentions herself and other mortgage professionals she knows who share the ultimate priority of their clients' best interests.
Warren even acknowledges that paranoid borrowers don't think straight, as she tells the tale of a woman who filed a formal complaint against her for pointing out the exorbitant fees and interest she was being charged for a subprime loan.
Once I got past my ever-increasing irritation at this now-ubiquitous borrower vs. broker slant, however, I was quite pleasantly surprised at what lay between the covers of "Homebuyers Beware." In fact, I found it to be full of how-to guidance, misconception-busting material, and very usable letters, scripts and questions for today's borrowers to use in very real-life situations.
In fact, the real-worldness of "Homebuyers Beware" was far and away its strongest suit -- and that's a big deal in the mortgage advice genre. So many mortgage guides are outdated or prioritize the easy loan types to discuss (e.g., conventional), ignoring that FHA and other government-backed loans are rapidly increasing in use by buyers coast to coast. ...CONTINUED
All rights reserved. This article may not be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, in part or in whole, without written permission of Inman News. Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright law.


You must login or register to post a comment.