Posts tagged “Hasty Decisions”.

Divorce and Money How to Make the Best Financial Decisions During Divorce

Divorce and Money How to Make the Best Financial Decisions During Divorce




Divorcing? Get everything you need to split assets and debts as fairly as possible.

When you’re going through divorce, you have to make an overwhelming number of financial decisions. Should you sell the house? What happens to retirement benefits? How will you handle taxes?

Full of sensitive and practical advice, Divorce & Money guides you through the process of making these important, and sometimes life-altering decisions. It covers how to:

  • decide whether to keep or sell the house
  • protect yourself against misuse of joint accounts and credit cards
  • avoid tax problems
  • handle alimony and child support
  • divide debts fairly
  • avoid hasty decisions that could hurt you financially
  • reduce risks to your investments
  • understand how a court evaluates assets
  • gain financial stability as a single person

    The fully updated 9th edition provides the latest tax figures and data, plus an expanded checklist of necessary post-divorce actions.

    User Ratings and Reviews

    5 Stars Take it from me, this is the best book
    All the dueling reviews below would have you wonder about the quality of both “Divorce and Money” books, so as an experiment I got both. It’s pretty clear that this book (Nolo’s) is the better one, hands down. The difference was evident in just minutes. Everything’s presented in easy to read verbiage, the charts are easy to use, and the forms and checklists were really handy. Helped me and my ex make the split easier than I expected, frankly. Thank you for this book!!

    5 Stars My new favorite book!
    Okay I might be exagerating but I did love this book. A friend recommended it after my husband and I decide to “part ways.” I accidently picked up the other book with the same title and was not so thrilled with all the Get A Attorney advice, but then I realized my mistake and got this version — it’s SO helpful. It almost took me by the hand and showed me how to be less emotional than I would be when making decisions affecting how to split our property and bills up, and how to figure out child support.

    1 Star My eyes glazed over………FELT LIKE I WAS IN LATIN CLASS!!
    Read both books and all the reviews of 2 books with basically the same name and if you want more information in a MUCH MORE user friendly, readable (in English) format at 1/2 the price buy the other book by Smith, Divorce and Money Everything you need to know. I read a review that the Smith book just wants you to hire expensive lawyers. NOTHING could be further from the truth. No matter what, you need a lawyer and this book tells you the same thing. It doesn’t mean you have to be stupid! As a normal, middle class guy with a college education and MY OWN BUSINESS this book makes you feel like you are in Latin Class again. Do your self a favor and not only buy Smith’s book on Money get her book on Children…….you will save lots of time and stress.

    1 Star For my money, a better bet is…..
    ….a newer book, “Divorce and Money: Eveything you need to Know,” by attorney Gayle Rosenwald Smith. The newer book even has its own website, www.divorceandmoneybook.com, which allowed me to peruse the contents, view a video clip of the author on CBS, and check her calendar to see if she would be appearing at a book store near me. Well she was, and I got to talk to her in person, which was great! She’s so knowledgeable and empathetic; her very human tone comes through in every page of her book. Gayle’s book lists at $14.95 (but I got it for less!) vs. $24.50 for the other book. At a time like this, I need to hang onto every penny I’ve got. I’m really glad I bought Gayle’s book, the information was up-to-date, thorough and invaluable. Why pay almost $10 more for an older book?

    5 Stars The best book available
    Recently saw another book with this same title at the bookstore, so I picked up both. Of the two, the Nolo book was so much more helpful — it assumes you want to handle most of the details yourself, and avoid lawyers, whereas the other kept talking about how to choose a lawyer (an expensive, time-wasting lawyer).

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