How to money Your ultimate visual guide to the basics of finance

Jean Sherman Chatzky, 1964-

Book - 2022

"There's no getting around it. You need to know how to manage money to know how to manage life - but most of us don't! This illustrated guidebook from New York Times bestselling author and financial expert Jean Chatzky, Kathryn Tuggle, and their team at HerMoney breaks down the basics of money - how to earn it, manage it, and use it - giving you all the tools you need to take charge and be fearless with personal finance. How to Money will teach you the basics of: creating a budget (and sticking to it), scoring that first job (and what that paystub means), navigating student loans (and avoiding student debt), getting that first credit card (and what "credit" is), investing like a pro (and why it's important!). A...ll so you can earn more, save smart, invest wisely, borrow only when you have to, and enjoy everything you've got!"--

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2nd Floor 332.024/Chatzky Due Oct 25, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Young adult literature
Instructional and educational works
Published
New York, NY : Roaring Brook Press 2022.
Language
English
Corporate Author
HerMoney (Firm)
Main Author
Jean Sherman Chatzky, 1964- (author)
Corporate Author
HerMoney (Firm) (-)
Other Authors
Kathryn Tuggle (author), Nina Cosford (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 244 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Audience
Ages 12-18
Grades 10-12
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 237) and index.
ISBN
9781250791696
  • A Note to All Our Readers from Jean and Kathryn
  • Introduction: How to Money
  • Part 1. Earn It
  • Chapter 1. Let's Get to Work: You Can't Really Learn to Manage Money until You Get Some
  • Chapter 2. Starting Your Own Business: There Are So Many Ways to Turn Your Free Time into Money-Making Opportunities
  • Chapter 3. The A to Z of Allowance: From Asking for One to How to Use It Best
  • Part 2. Manage It
  • Chapter 4. Set Your Goals: The Only Way to Get What You Want Is to Know What You Want
  • Chapter 5. How to Budget: The Pathway to Making Your Money Work for You
  • Chapter 6. Hey, Where's My Money? Banks, Checking and Savings Accounts, Debit Cards, and More
  • Chapter 7. Give Me Some Credit: Why Credit Is So Important to Your Bright Financial Future
  • Chapter 8. Investing = Making Money in Your Sleep: When You're an Investor, Your Money Is Always Working for You
  • Part 3. Use It
  • Chapter 9. Spending Smart: You Don't Need It, and You Might Not Even Really Want It-So Why Did You Feel Compelled to Buy It? (We Know; We've Done It, Too)
  • Chapter 10. Big-Ticket Items: Your First Car and First Apartment Are Closer than You Think
  • Part 4. Get Schooled
  • Chapter 11. Getting an Education: College Is Only Worth It If You Graduate
  • Chapter 12. Your Career-And Your Paycheck! Yes, You Should Start Thinking about Your Options Now
  • Part 5. Look to the Future
  • Chapter 13. Health is Wealth: Why Staying Healthy Is a Good Move for Your Life (and a Smart Money Move, Too!)
  • Chapter 14. How to Money-Happily: Now You Know All the Secrets
  • Your Next Big Steps
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary
  • Selected Sources
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This straightforward book by the staff of HerMoney.com effectively uses infographics to teach teens money management basics. It's intended for anyone to read but does emphasize finances for women, thanks to gender-wage inequities ("A study from the American Association of University Women says the gender wage gap won't actually be closed until 2119"). Five sections cover earning and managing money (budgeting, accounts, financial tracking apps, investing), spending (buying new versus used), the value of an education (traditional and nontraditional), careers, student-loan debt, and the correlation between good health and less financial stress. The book offers helpful interview tips, and Rebecca Cohen, one of the book's contributors, includes her resume and cover letter. Chapters have key takeaway summaries, definitions in sidebars, and exercises to reinforce what was introduced in the book's sections. Interviews with leading women business leaders or influencers, such as Minda Harts, Jazz Jennings, Crystal Echo Hawk, and Athena Valentine, are included. This useful financial guidebook for teens is appealingly illustrated with accurate, accessible, and timely content.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up--Conversational and contemporary, this engrossing guidebook by Chatzky, Kathryn Tuggle, and the team from the HerMoney website addresses financial issues that women faced in the past, reviews their current opportunities, and projects the possibility for success in their future. Introducing money as a tool for shaping emotional, social, and physical wellbeing, the authors set a tone of achievable tasks and realistic goals. Covering a range of topics from the merit of thrift stores to the possibilities of cryptocurrency, the timely content is informational and entertaining. The standard financial literacy topics of budgeting, employment, education, spending, and investing are interwoven in an interesting manner with an individual's wants, needs, giving, interests, and personal happiness. With an emphasis on earning, saving, and investing at a young age, the attractively illustrated text can be read sequentially, or teens can select a topic of specific interest. The book's well-done format includes sidebars, interviews, and an occasional chart, graph, or sample document. The diversity of the interviewed businesswomen speaks to their successes and failures. Examples include Jazz Jennings, Sandra Lopez, and Ilhan Omar. Vocabulary words are highlighted in blue. The book's back matter includes a 10-page glossary, helpful index, and a selected sources section. A resource for any gender, this engaging guidebook functions as an informational text, supplement to a personal finance course, and research tool. VERDICT Due to the rapid changes in currency trends, investing, and monetary policy, this book will likely not stand the test of time, but it is currently an excellent addition to the school library's self-help collection.--Lynne Stover

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Financial advice and guidelines for young people taking their first hesitant steps into "Adultville." Personal finance experts, including the host of the HerMoney podcast, squire readers through the basics of goal setting, budgeting, banking, choosing credit and debit cards, managing student loans and other debt, health and other insurance, and job hunting. The advice is sensible and presented in positive, upbeat tones, if sometimes imprecise and overly generalized. It includes frank acknowledgment of continuing salary gaps based on gender, race, sexual orientation, and gender identity; cumulative intergenerational inequalities; and the effects on individuals who have more than one marginalized identity. The vital importance of developing a habit of saving as early as possible gets proper stress. The authors give stock market investing an equally hard sell, assuring readers that it's easy money with, over the long term at least, guaranteed profits. The work opens with a quote from Jane Bryant Quinn that "money isn't pink or blue; it's green," explaining that a primary goal of both the book and the HerMoney organization is redressing the long-standing gender gap in the world of finance by centering women while offering advice that readers of all genders can utilize. The work contains interviews with over a dozen individuals, many of them women business owners or leaders of women-centered initiatives, and youth-targeted sample lists of income sources and budget items. Cosford's small, color illustrations break up and brighten the text and portray racially diverse individuals. Encouraging, empowering, and up to date. (glossary, selected sources, index) (Nonfiction. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.