Find out the latest indie author news. For FREE.

ADVERTISEMENT

Be Good With Money
No matter how good we are at money, we always want to be better. Drawing on a 30-year career as a financial advisor, influenced by a family history of financial secrets and betrayal, Michelle Arpin Begina exposes the silent narratives of shame and secrecy that often tether us to lifelong struggles with money. Be Good With Money illuminates the path to understanding the real roots of financial self-sabotage, liberating readers from the myths that hold them back. With a blend of compassion and expertise, Michelle reveals six transformative concepts to dismantle the financial booms and busts that keep us stuck. Too often, we find ourselves privately nursing wounds in survival mode, and falling short from realizing our full financial potential. Through in-depth money therapy exercises, she guides us to transform our relationship with money to be as good with it as we are in the rest of our life. Instead of a magic wand, Be Good With Money is an old school / new school mashup of social psychology and financial therapy, weaving stories—complete with plot twists—that whisper the truth about our often secret, tangled relationships with money. Michelle’s empathetic approach will help you make peace with your past and embrace your financial reality with clarity, confidence, and courage. Be Good With Money shows us why talking about money can transform our lives—and how to do it—inspiring readers to crack open the emotional vault and break the fiscal glass ceiling. You deserve to be good with money—and this book will show you how.
Reviews
Begina’s debut offers a lifeline to the financially hopeless. Tackling the importance of financial education from the lively and personable opening lines, she recounts a formative financially traumatic experience, at the hands of her hardworking but irresponsible parents. This sharply told tale of “sudden financial independence” functions as something like a superhero’s origin, as Begina, who went on to earn a certificate in financial therapy, had to come to understand the importance of an attitude change. Under the “Poverty of prosperity” banner, she persuasively argues that America’s love affair with wealth puts many otherwise good, sensible people on the road to financial ruin. These disasters occur because of a lack of basic financial education, an aversion towards long-range planning, and an inability to resist temptation, i.e., buying a boat with their children’s college fund.

Noting that most of us are taught to go out and build wealth but that very few are taught how to manage it, Begina demonstrates how poor decisions frequently have ramifications that go far beyond the financial, causing many to become anxious, insecure, and distrustful. To that end, Begina outlines “six transformational concepts” to help readers “be as good with money as they are in the rest of their lives.” Begina’s guide has a lot going for it. The style is honest and refreshing, and Begina demonstrates throughout the ability to communicate seemingly complex concepts with inviting clarity.

Begina demonstrates key financial topics through storytelling and basic psychology—like self-sabotage, which, the author notes, arises from an “imbalance” between two “universal human needs: belonging and autonomy.” Be Good with Money is a starting point rather than a roadmap to money management, i.e., tax or retirement planning, insurance, budgeting. The rousing attitude adjustment introduced in those first pages is likely to inspire new starts among readers, and the book that follows introduces the basics with wit, clarity, and a welcome sense of fun.

Takeaway: Inviting guide to changing one’s attitude about money and financial well-being.

Comparable Titles: Jake Cousineau’s How to Adult, Jean Chatzky’s How to Money.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

ADVERTISEMENT

Loading...