A blunt mindset book about money scripts, ambition, and the strange psychological ceiling people carry around without noticing.
T. Harv Eker focuses on the mental scripts around money. Some of the language is theatrical, but the subject is real.
I liked the idea that financial behavior often follows identity before it follows spreadsheets. Numbers matter; the stories underneath them matter too.
The book can get a little seminar-stage shiny. Still, separating useful insight from motivational glitter is an adult skill.
It is worth reading as a mirror for money patterns. Not gospel, not garbage, just material to test against behavior.
I would not treat it as financial doctrine. I would treat it as a mirror for patterns. Sometimes that is exactly the annoying tool one needs.
The useful question is not whether every claim is perfect. The useful question is which money beliefs keep repeating in the background while pretending to be facts.