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The Cheapskate Next Door

The Surprising Secrets of Americans Living Happily Below Their Means

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
America’s Ultimate Cheapskate is back with all new secrets for how to live happily below your means, á la cheapskate.  For The Cheapskate Next Door, Jeff Yeager tapped his bargain-basement-brain-trust, hitting the road to interview and survey hundreds of his fellow cheapskates to divulge their secrets for living the good life on less. 
     Jeff reveals the 16 key attitudes about money – and life – that allow the cheapskates next door to live happy, comfortable, debt-free lives while spending only a fraction of what most Americans spend.  Their strategies will change your way of thinking about money and debunk some of life’s biggest money myths.  For example, you’ll learn:  how to cut your food bill in half and eat healthier as a result; how your kids can get a college education without ever borrowing a dime; how to let the other guy pay for deprecation by learning the secrets of buying used, not abused; how you can save serious money by negotiating and bartering; and how – if you know where to look – there’s free stuff and free fun all around you.
     The Cheapskate Next Door also features dozens of original “Cheap Shots” – quick, money saving tips that could save you more than $25,000 in a single year!  Cheap Shots give you the inside scoop on: 
 
— How to save hundreds on kids’ toys;
— What inexpensive old-fashioned kitchen appliance can save you more than $200 a year;
— How you can travel the world without ever having to pay for lodging;
— What single driving tip can save you $30,000 during your lifetime;
— Even how to save up to 40% on fine wines (and we’re not talking about the kind that comes in a box). 
 
From simple money saving tips to truly life changing financial strategies, the cheapskates next door know that the key to financial freedom and enjoying life more is not how much you earn, but how much you spend. 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 3, 2010
      Yeager (The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to True Riches) is back with another energetic, likably eccentric lesson on living happily well below your means. Interviewing a variety of self-professed cheapskates, he finds—despite a diversity of lifestyles, backgrounds, and beliefs— common practices and philosophies when it came to money; their knowledge of how to live on less has insulated them from the economic crash. He presents their tips on frugal living in grocery shopping, entertainment, and sensible parenting, but the real value is in Yeager’s persuasive argument that an onset of “Spending Anxiety Disorder” is good for our wallets, our communities, and the environment. If we change the way we think about “want” vs. “need,” we can focus our time and attention on the truly valuable things—family, charity, passions, the early retirement that will make enjoying them longer possible—and if we consume sparingly, thoughtfully, and fully, our possessions will not consume us. Yeager and his “Miser Advisers” are proof that living more frugally isn’t about sacrifice—it’s about making choices every day to live a better, happier, more thoughtful life with less.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from July 1, 2010
      Ah, yes, belt-tightening is the procedure of the day, from how giant businesses conduct themselves to managing ones own personal finances. It is the latter aspect of conservative spending that the author of the popular Ultimate Cheapskates Road Map to True Riches (2007) and of the blog Green Cheapskate addresses in this delightfulyes, delightfulguide for me, you, and everyone else. Personal finance is a universal concern, particularly in these tight economic times. It is a topic that people need to know about but still shy away from. Yeager is here to draw you in and does so easily. He does not use the term cheapskate in a pejorative fashion; after all, he lists himself as one and wishes that all his readers would aspire to cheapskateness. A cheapskate to him is someone who lives below his or her means and does so happily. How to spend less than you are spending now is the program he details; the amazing fact about this book is that in addition to his instructions making perfect sense, like no other book of its kind, this one can be read simply for the humor of the authors prose.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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