Ivy League Wealth Secrets

That the Master Planners Don't Want You to Know!

Non-Fiction - Business/Finance
364 Pages
Reviewed on 06/19/2011
Buy on Amazon

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    Book Review

Reviewed by Alice DiNizo for Readers' Favorite

Ivy League Wealth Secrets spells out clearly how to save and invest in insurances, how to avoid what the author calls 'financial land mines,' how to deal with the many different forms of taxes, what the consumer should know about family businesses, consumer debt, retirement strategies, real estate investments and inheritance issues. The author, Keith Soltis, is a financial expert with fifteen years of experience and is concerned that the average person can be misinformed when it comes to financial matters.

Ivy League Wealth Secrets is well organized, well written and carefully edited. The information it imparts uses many graphs, charts and illustrations that help make the author's information quite accessible. Keith Soltis is careful to tell the reader that the information he imparts is just that, information. It is not legal or tax advice.

However, this book will be read mostly by those with a true interest in making their money work for them. The average person who really needs the suggestions that the author makes will more than likely not pick up this book and read it in its entirety. And that is sad. This is a well-written book on a topic that people need to know much more about.

If each chapter in this valuable book was printed, one at a time, once a week in local newspapers or in magazines, then its information would reach the people who need it most. Keith Soltis states at the end that the reader should, "Get back the dollars that others are stealing from you." He offers training seminars and gives an email address where he can be reached. Hopefully, somehow, financially uninformed people everywhere will pay attention to this outreach.