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Go Green, Live Rich: 50 Simple Ways to Save the Earth and Get Rich Trying


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Written by: David Bach, Hillary Rosner

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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 640
ISBN: 076792973X
Number Of Pages: 192
Publication Date: 2008-04-08
Publisher: Broadway
Release Date: 2008-04-08
DteCode: j01

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Editorial Reviews:

Let David Bach show you a whole new way to prosper—by going green

Internationally renowned financial expert and bestselling author David Bach has always urged readers to put their financial lives in line with their values. But what if your values are a cleaner and greener earth? Most people think that “going green” is an expensive choice they can’t afford. Bach is here to say that you can have both: a life in line with your green values and a million dollars in the bank.

Go Green, Live Rich outlines fifty ways to make your life, your home, your shopping, and your finances greener—and get rich trying. From driving the right car to making your home energy smart, Bach offers ways to improve the environment while you spend less, save more, earn more, and pay fewer taxes. Best of all, he shows you exactly how to take advantage of the "green wave" in personal finance without the difficult work of evaluating individual stocks. What's more, he will get you thinking about a green business of your own so you can help the world along as it is changing for the better.

David Bach is on a mission to teach the world that you can live a great life by living a green life. With Go Green, Live Rich, you can live in line with your eco-values on the road to financial freedom.




User Comments about the Go Green, Live Rich: 50 Simple Ways to Save the Earth and Get Rich Trying

On one hand, it presents a simple list of green things to do and it probably reaches an audience who would not normally think about doing them. I just feel there should be more integrity behind the message. Does that mean the tips are not valuable. For example, if I wanted advice on how to raise my children, I'd prefer to get it from someone who was passionate about kids even if the person who didn't care about kids also had good information. He claims his epiphany was a sick building he was in. I think most people know now that fluorescent light bulbs use less energy. His co-author however, Hillary Rosner, is the one with the credentials. It actually costs more, but you're willing to pay for it because it's the right thing to do.


So, three stars because the book is great for a green newbie. If everyone made small changes, collectively, it would have a significant impact.On the other hand, I don't really believe that David Bach is really an environmentalist. I have mixed feelings about this book. Then he somehow extrapolated that to his gas guzzling SUV and then to children and saving the planet. It seems she probably wrote the whole book and David Bach wrote the intro section.Having just self-published my own book, I've been learning a lot about the publishing industry and some it is very eye-opening.


Anyone who truly lives a green lifestyle knows that it's not really cheaper to be green. It's a pretty book, it's easy to read and it's definitely aimed at people who are new to the environmental movement. For that, I applaud it. This book feels very packaged, like Bach's publisher decided they needed to cash in on the green trend so they dug up an environmental writer, and then pasted Bach's name on the book. One star if you already know the tip about the light bulbs.


No, but they are very simplistic.


There is a list of references at the end of the book. His emphasis is on driving cars, maintaining lawn and so forth with less fossil fuels, even though we may not be able to drive at all when impending oil shortages occur. Although gasoline-powered mowers do use fossil fuels, they pale in insignificance compared to the usage in automobiles.Like most green endeavors, this book does not go far enough. But I think a slant towards living within our resource means and a warning about the impending fuel shortage would improve the book.


Some examples include "Grow a Greener Lawn", "Switch to Compact Fluorescent Bulb", and "Upgrade to a Hybrid". Further, he advocates driving hybrids, using solar panels, and using CFLs without considering the possibilities of shortages of lithium, nickel, tellurium, indium, and other resources this might cause and the possibility of mercury pollution from CFLs. Further, he provides a way you can calculate your planetary footprint.The biggest advantage of this book is the large number of references it gives. He talks in terms of pollution and global warming, when the running out of fossil fuels is by far a worse problem.


There has been a movement in favor of using our resources in a more thrifty manner, with the color green applied to this movement because it is the color of vegetation. He does not go into the details of solar panels, for instance, as to whether you have southern exposure, the dimensions required and so forth, for example.I still think this is a good book to get if you want to get started with living more within our planet's means. Mr. This is an elementary book. For example, Americans use 800 million gallons of gasoline in lawn mowers. We throw lots of stuff into the landfills and use a lot of energy and fossil fuels. He does mention "Grow your own food", which some peak oil experts say will become necessary in the years ahead. He presents 50 different ways of living life in a more earth-friendly manner.


In the past 50 years we have lived a wasteful lifestyle. Everywhere you look there is a URL that you can access to find more about the subject. Bach provides references for many of the statistics he provides us, so the book is well documented.I think the book would be improved if it had a table of contents so you can go quickly to the area you want. We hear of all kinds of ways we can save the environment.


In the future we simply will not have all these resources to use. Here is another one, with David Bach's "Go Green, Live Rich". Some of the statistics tend to be hyperbolic. In this case, 800 million gallons is around 19 million barrels of oil; since Americans use 8 billion barrels a year, this is 0.23% of the total.


Don't use huge illion numbers when a percentage gives a truer picture.


The info is good - it's all (been) available elsewhere.One thing the author "could have" included on his list of green behaviors: Guys, get a vasectomy. all the environmental problems we face today (all of them) stem from one simple fact: over population, and American kids consume a vastly disproportionate share of global resources. "Late to the party, much." I can't believe the publication date on this is 2008. Is he just cashing in on the most recent "green" movement. Now they're finally waking up to the new reality. First I have to admit I did NOT purchase this title from Amazon.


(If I can get it used I don't buy "new." - That's "green".right).Now about the book. Where has the author been until now. Better late than never I suppose. Or perhaps this is aimed at the crowd who swallowed the line (promulgated by Limbaugh, et al) that climate change was a liberal myth. I bought it at a local used bookstore - where I buy most of the books I read. All the info in the book should be common knowledge by now.


Or have some people really not gotten the memo yet.


from the 3 books that I purchased is the one that I let a friend borrow so I have not see it jet, sorry



I am an avid investor and stock trader but he introduced me to green mutual funds and ETFs that I had never heard of. The book shows fifty quick and easy ways that living more simply will save you money while saving the earth. I am by no means an environmentalist or "Green", but I love to live frugally and simply, this book really made me think in ways that I have not in the past. The book is a great addition to your library of David Bach books or as a stand alone book for anyone that is unfamiliar with David Bach's advice. Mr. Bach pulls it off nicely showing how living "green" causes one to quit over consuming and save money that can be invested for growth over the years. His final piece of advice is to start your green business if you have a million dollar idea of how to do something better to save the earth. I highly recommend reading this book to people interested in wealth building and to environmentalists (this is a new spin, a convenient truth:going green saves money).


I do not know of any other book on the market that combines environmentalism with creating personal wealth. Whether it is saving $884 a year by getting a car with better gas mileage or $2,250 a year by bringing your lunch to work, you will be reducing Co2 emissions and trash into landfills. I am looking forward to David Bach's next book. He also believes that green companies will be great investments in 21st century the way tech stocks were for the late 80's and 90's.