Andrew Tobias
Author of The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need
About the Author
Andrew Tobias is a financial columnist. He attended Harvard Business School. He currently writes a column for Money Angles, and his works have appeared in Time, New York Magazine, Esquire, Parade, The New York Times Sunday Magazine, Money, and Worth. Tobias has appeared on television shows such as show more Today, Tonight, Tomorrow, Good Morning America and Face the Nation. He is the author of The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need and received the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalist and the Consume Federation of America Media Service Award. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Alan Light
Works by Andrew Tobias
Invisible Bankers: Everything the Insurance Industry Never Wanted You To Know (1982) 95 copies, 4 reviews
Auto Insurance Alert! Why the System Stinks, How to Fix It, and What to Do in the Meantime (1993) 9 copies
Dollars and Sense 1 copy
Associated Works
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (1841) — Foreword, some editions — 2,954 copies, 43 reviews
The Little Book That Still Beats the Market (2010) — Foreword, some editions — 384 copies, 4 reviews
Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically Everything, 1966-2012 (2012) — Contributor — 333 copies, 5 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Tobias, Andrew P.
- Other names
- Reid, John
- Birthdate
- 1947-04-20
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Harvard University (MBA)
Harvard University (BA|Slavic languages) - Occupations
- journalist
author
investment advisor - Organizations
- Democratic National Committee
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Found this book at an AAUW booksale and bought it on the strength of its first few pages. And it was a deal, even if only for the first half. Tobias/Reid is an engaging writer with a terrific, self-deprecating sense of humor, which comes across wonderfully. TBLBITW is, I think, an excellent primer for non-gays like me about the heartaches and difficulties of growing up gay in the 1950s and 60s - and probably before that too. Tobias conveys a real and vivid sense of just how awful it was to show more pretend to be straight for the first 21 years of his life, and I felt for the guy. It is his sense of humor which ultimately saves the book, and makes it eminently readable for the most part. And it was, I'm sure, that same healthy sense of humor that saved Tobias himself as he was going through all those terrible and trying years of growing up, first groping for, then finding his true sexual identity and trying to figure out how in the hell he was supposed to live. It was only the second half of the book, after he "came out" following his college years, that the narrative became rather self-absorbed and even tedious, as he gave in to his compulsion to tell all about the various couplings and sexual practices of the gay community - in NYC, Boston, Provincetown, etc in that pre-AIDS era of the 70s. I know he'd been missing all this "fun" for ten-plus years, but sometimes "TMI" can be an apt objection. So I did some skim-reading for the last 50 or 60 pages. That said, this was a better, more readable book, in many ways, than Edmund White's gay autobiography, MY LIVES. But not quite as good as FAMOUS BUILDER, by Paul Lisicky, who knew where to draw that line. So I'll recommend the first half of the book, and the second half with reservations. show less
A book I wish I'd read earlier in life as I struggled with many of the same issues that the author did. This is a coming out story that shows how scary and often depressing it can be dealing with society's expectations and our reactions to the various strategies it uses to try to control us. Often leading double lives, we can sometimes be forced into acting like spies - lying to ourselves and others in the process. Meanwhile the process itself often accentuates the negative aspects of being show more part of a minority. Also, covers the conflicts that arise when we know we are gay but fail to find anyone we're really attracted to or that is compatible sexually - which can delay things...Second half of the book a bit tedious... show less
Not the only one, but very helpful, very readable. It changed my way of looking at investing and preparing for retirement.
I was concerned about picking up this updated version, having read the first one in the 70s when Tobias first wrote it, but was not disappointed for going through this quick read again. I picked it up because several of my 20-something children were asking for some good references as they begin their investing lives, and was vetting it to see if I might recommend it.
Tobias has updated it, and he speaks plainly about what has changed and what has stayed the same. I found the earlier parts of show more the book the most useful as they spoke to personal finance and planning. The latter part of the book focused on the stock market, and while very important to the investor, because of my age and experience in the market I was bored. I suspect that if my children read it that they too will be bored by those parts, and may skip over them. They really shouldn't, as they can learn something from Tobias here, but I found myself wondering if someone more "Cramer-like," bombastic, loud...might resonate more. I didn't find it the perfect book to recommend for those 20-somethings, but lacking a good substitute I suppose I will with appropriate caveats. show less
Tobias has updated it, and he speaks plainly about what has changed and what has stayed the same. I found the earlier parts of show more the book the most useful as they spoke to personal finance and planning. The latter part of the book focused on the stock market, and while very important to the investor, because of my age and experience in the market I was bored. I suspect that if my children read it that they too will be bored by those parts, and may skip over them. They really shouldn't, as they can learn something from Tobias here, but I found myself wondering if someone more "Cramer-like," bombastic, loud...might resonate more. I didn't find it the perfect book to recommend for those 20-somethings, but lacking a good substitute I suppose I will with appropriate caveats. show less
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- Works
- 17
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 2,234
- Popularity
- #11,484
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 19
- ISBNs
- 70
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