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The Survivors Club: The Secrets and Science that Could Save Your Life |  | Author: Ben Sherwood Publisher: Grand Central Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $8.07 as of 7/28/2010 16:40 CDT details You Save: $6.92 (46%)
New (41) from $8.07
Seller: value_booksellers Rating: 150 reviews Sales Rank: 1924
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Pages: 400 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 5.9 x 1.3
ISBN: 0446698857 Dewey Decimal Number: 613.69 EAN: 9780446698856 ASIN: 0446698857
Publication Date: February 3, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| | ISBN13: 9780446698856 | | | Condition: New | | | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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Product Description There are plenty of books about coping with adversity. But isn't until now, with WHO SURVIVES, that we discover the human factors that determine survival. It's a combination instruction book and security blanket that blends compelling true stories with cutting-edge science to deliver some of the most important lessons we'll ever need to learn.
The book will: --list the most important traits necessary for survival (e.g., adaptability, tenacity, faith) --identify the 5 types of survivors --debunk myths (like only the strong survive), explore the frontiers of survival science (How much strain and punishment can a human body endure?), and introduce readers to counterintuitive thinking (Ever heard of posttraumatic growth?) --provide a Survivors Tool Kit, including an online test that measures one's Survivor's Quotient
Each one of us eventually joins the club of millions who face life's inescapable tribulations and tragedies. WHO SURVIVES is the companion we need to prepare us for and guide us through the worst.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 150
I survived reading it July 17, 2010 R. Michael Friends (Round Rock, TX USA) The Survivors Club by Ben Sherwood is an entertaining book, but a little short on anything useful. The stories are interesting, until he jumps around and fills us with useless background on the persons involved (do I care where they were born, where they went to high school and such trivia). The advice he provides is not new or life changing, just what any normal thinking person might do anyway, I suspect that is his way of making us feel good and like his book.
What I disliked is his distortions on the Bosnian War. He was covering the war from Sarajevo for ABC news , and he should have known first had what was going on. Yet he claims without comment that the Serbian army massacred 8000 men and boys in Srebrenica in July of 1995. He goes on to explain in detail, as if fact, the torture, murder and mass graves. This is a little deceptive since nobody really knows how many people from Srebrenica were executed, how many died in combat, and how many were collateral damage, but we do know that most of the victims were military personnel and not civilians. The Hague Tribunal has acknowledged that "a percentage of the bodies in the gravesites examined may have been of men killed in combat," Probably a massacre happened but maybe not like that picture which main stream media has offered.
He also claims that Slobodan Milosevic died of fear in prison during his war crimes trials at the Hague. Fear of what? The trial produced nothing to condemn him, and was going badly (not that I am saying he was innocent). It is more likely Milosevic was poisoned, as his autopsy suggests.
The Survivors Club July 13, 2010 L. Highfield (Indiana) Came just in time for Father's Day for my Hubby. Recommended by Glenn Beck. A MUST for anyone who wants to survive a crossroad in life. We all will have one, you know. Better to be prepared!!
Attitude and Belief are Key July 10, 2010 Marceau O'Neill Both entertaining and eye-opening, this study by Ben Sherwood reveals the inexplicable - and well substantiated - truth that one's belief and attitude can promise the likelihood of their survival. I found it refreshing that the author has illustrated both the fragility of life and our built-in capability to overcome seeming futility.
Very enjoyable reading. Stimulating enough that I'll retain it as a "self-reliance" reference work.
Marceau O'Neill,
Author of "I Know You Know I'm Out Here!"
Must Read Information July 9, 2010 Suzanne K. Huebner (Waterloo) This book from beginning to end was full of riveting stories of survival. It brought the reader into the book in a way that was much different than any other I have read. After reading the main part of the book the reader was given the opportunity to fill out a questionairre online to assess their survival mentality. This is a book that I will not just put on a shelf but use as a personal reference book in the future...great job, Ben.
knowledge is power during disaster July 6, 2010 GrammyCrafter I assumed this book might be a bit of fluff to entertain me. It was a gift card purchase from Amazon that I selected myself. What a pleasant surprise to discover it was full of information that I might use during a disaster to help save my life. It also discussed how mind set can improve life expectancy. Examples were from real life and applicable to anyone who will incorporate the lessons into their own life. Actually, it has caused me to change my viewpoint on potentially dangerous events. I now believe I am a survivor. I am recommending The Survivors Club book to my family and friends as essential information.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 150
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| Worthwhile Reading | Your 401k Account - An Annual Checkup By Dee Marie
You probably perform a lot of tasks annually. Some of these tasks protect you, your family, or even your assets. These chores include visiting your doctor for an annual physical or cleaning the gutters on your house. Well, next time you're making your list of 'must-do's' be certain to include a checkup for your 401(k) plan on your list.
Your annual examination of your 401(k) plan should cover a few different aspects of your investment. You can check each one quickly by exploring your most recent account statement.
First, you should evaluate your contribution amount. Changes in your financial position over the past year could warrant an increase or decrease in the amount you put into your 401(k).
Receiving a raise at work is a great occasion to increase your retirement contribution. Changing your contribution amount isn't what matters here; it's taking the time to decide if you should make a change.
Next, you should take a look at your investment choices. A mutual fund that was outperforming its peers at this time last year may have tanked over the last twelve months. Although it's important to remember that you don't want to change your investment allocations too often, a regular examination of the funds you've chosen isn't excessive.
Finally, you should check on the way your investment options within your 401(k) are spread. Investing in four mutual funds, you might decide to put twenty-five percent of your account into each fund. However, if one fund grows more aggressively than another, at the end of the year you may have forty percent in one fund, ten percent in another, and twenty-five percent in each of the remaining two funds. Since financial experts sometimes advise that retirement accounts should be spread among many different types of investment, you may want to rebalance your account back to your original allocations of twenty-five percent in each fund.
Making changes to your 401(k) plan isn't something that should be taken lightly. Speak with your financial advisor if you aren't certain about the direction you should be taking. Regardless of the actions you decide to take, you'll feel better about your retirement plan after taking care of its annual maintenance.
Want to learn how to save more money? Head on over to http://NotMadeOfMoney.com/blog - Be sure to grab our RSS feed or sign up to receive email updates
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CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME. | | Retirement Facts | In the private sector, participation by type of retirement plan has largely reversed over the past quartercentury: 'Traditional' defined benefit pension plans were dominant in 1979, but have been overtaken by defined contribution (401(k)-type) plans. The share of workers who are in both a defined benefit and defined contribution plan has remained fairly constant over the years.
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