The Richest Man in Babylon
"Gold flees the man who would force it to impossible
earnings..."
THIS IS a short book with a simple message – easily summarized as "Obey
these rules about money, and
you will make it."
That doesn't do the book justice, however. It was written
in the 1920s in the style of
an ancient classic. So you can almost believe it was dug up after a few thousand years, and translated
by a poverty-stricken
archaeologist who published it because he appreciated the timelessness of its message. And this feel is
exactly what Clason
intended.
The Richest Man in Babylon is very easy reading. The book
is arranged as a series of
parables populated by characters who give the stories both continuity and narrative form. You're not
being directly instructed; you
get to draw your own conclusions.
Rarely has anything been written which
tells people in such an agreeable
way how they can make a sensible practical difference to their future financial well-being.