Publishers Weekly
01/26/2015
This book’s message can be summed up in the title of its epilogue: “It’s Better to Be Wealthy than Rich, Even If You’re Poor.” The titular green line is the author’s useful conceit for describing this desirable state of being. A financial journalist, Sullivan consults with experts from the “one percent” to prescribe a set of strategies for achieving financial stability, such as investing in education for one’s children rather than spending time and energy on avoiding taxes. Most important, in his opinion, is understanding how your feelings about earning, saving, and spending motivate financial decisions. Sullivan lays bare a number of his own financial concerns, foibles, and successes. His personal journey, which includes being grilled by the TIGER 21 club (a kind of therapy group for the financial elite) and a visit to Kansas State University’s behavioral finance research lab, proves both entertaining and instructive. Drawing on research in behavioral economics, the book is timely—taking up the topic of income inequality without picking a side—as well as smart. Agent: Erika Storella, Gernert Company. (Mar.)
Bloomberg Businessweek
Rather than function as wealth porn, this book looks at how people with lots of money exercise self-control. Just as you bore of their piousness, it switches focus to those who love to spend. Fun!
Better Investing
I loved Sullivan’s breezy, compelling writing. He’s a natural storyteller and each chapter feels more like a thoughtful conversation with an old and trusted friend than some important lesson you’re supposed to be memorizing… Read The Thin Green Line if you’re looking for new ideas to increase your personal net worth or you want to see how your own decisions measure up to those who’ve had great financial success.
Dan Heath
"Chances are you will buy this book for its smart and practical advice about building true wealth. (Seriously, buy it.) But what kept me hooked were the tales of money decisions gone horribly awry: fortunes squandered, kids ruined by inheritances, and rich people made miserable by their riches. Learn from the wise, or learn from the foolisheither way, you win."
Kirkus Reviews
2014-12-29
Want to get rich? Stay in school and save your money.New York Times financial columnist Sullivan (Clutch: Why Some People Excel Under Pressure and Other Don't, 2010) has a deeper, more sophisticated take on money management than all that, but the point remains: Most wealthy people place a premium on education, have voted on that with their wallets, and have learned the fine art of deferring gratification with an eye to building a portfolio. Writing sometimes too breezily but always engagingly, Sullivan distinguishes between "rich," meaning simply having a lot of money, and "wealthy," meaning "having more money than you needed to do all the things you wanted to do." That distinction—the thin green line of the title—is important, since it gauges financial well-being on one's tastes and requirements. In that sense, a person without encumbrances who has $100,000 can be wealthier than one leveraged to the hilt and worth 10 times that on paper. So being rich does not translate to being financially secure. Nor does it necessarily mean having successfully captured huge swaths of the market; by Sullivan's account, the top 1 percent of earners in this country had "just about the same percentage they had in 1936." Of course, since that time, the 1 percent has become adept at rent-seeking. All the same, they distinguish themselves in other ways, including spending less money eating out and putting more into retirement accounts. "Over years," Sullivan notes, "those differences become enormous." Other subtle differences come into play, as well. There's a reason employers are reluctant to hire workers with GEDs, for instance, and why being rich doesn't always equate to having good taste. Still, as one of Sullivan's chapter titles puts it by way of summary and slogan, "It's better to be wealthy than rich, even if you're poor." Therein lies the secret to security. There's good how-to stuff here, but Sullivan's added value is his gentle insistence that wealth and money aren't synonyms.