Wealthy Women In America


Are America's Wealthy Too Powerful?


Are America’s Wealthy Too Powerful?


$21.2


This book is in New – Excellent condition

Wealthy+Women+In+America


The Buccaneers


The Buccaneers


$8.70


As four young American women find their way through the labyrinthine social world of 1870s England, their fortunes rise–and sometimes, with brutal abruptness, fall. Based on Edith Wharton’s unfinished novel, The Buccaneers, this lavish BBC production follows Nan and Virginia St. George (Carla Gugino, Spy Kids, and Alison Elliott, The Spitfire Grill), two American sisters who follow their friend C…

Cheap Amusements: Working Women and Leisure in Turn-of-the-Century New York


Cheap Amusements: Working Women and Leisure in Turn-of-the-Century New York


$12.49


What did young, independent women do for fun and how did they pay their way into New York City’s turn-of-the-century pleasure places? “Cheap Amusements” is a fascinating discussion of young working women whose meager wages often fell short of bare subsistence and rarely allowed for entertainment expenses. Kathy Peiss follows working women into saloons, dance halls, Coney Island amusement parks, so…

Our Kind of People: Inside America's Black Upper Class


Our Kind of People: Inside America’s Black Upper Class


$6.25


Debutante cotillions. Million-dollar homes. Summers in Martha’s Vineyard. Membership in the Links, Jack & Jill, Deltas, Boule, and AKAs. An obsession with the right schools, families, social clubs, and skin complexion. This is the world of the black upper class and the focus of the first book written about the black elite by a member of this hard-to-penetrate group.Author and TV commentator Lawren…

The Blue Sweater: Bridging the Gap Between Rich and Poor in an Interconnected World


The Blue Sweater: Bridging the Gap Between Rich and Poor in an Interconnected World


$1.97


For the first 5,000 copies of The Blue Sweater purchased, a $15 donation per book will be made to Acumen Fund, a nonprofit that invests in transformative businesses to solve the problems of poverty.The Blue Sweater is the inspiring story of a woman who left a career in international banking to spend her life on a quest to understand global poverty and find powerful new ways of tackling it. It all …

The Importance of Finding a Millionaire Success Coach Like Marshall Sylver

Most people think that building wealth like millionaire success mentor Marshall Sylver is beyond reach. Maybe you can’t even imagine it happening, because it is beyond anything you have ever known. Many people haven’t ever known even one millionaire.

This demonstrates the importance of finding a mentor. Most of us never learned to be free thinkers, to strive to broaden our sense of what is possible for us and to blossom in previously unimaginable ways. The fact is that most people were taught to play it safe, to seek some kind of steady employment and make do with an okay existence.

Get Rich Radio‘s host, Marshall Sylver, offers much, much more. He teaches people to seek wealth and freedom. The question for you, then, becomes “Are you willing to settle for an ordinary life?” What if you are ready to break free from your ordinary existence and create a life that’s remarkable? To make this possible, you must move into uncharted terrain.

You probably realize from past experience that it’s foolish to head out into uncharted terrain without a roadmap. If you are determined to be very effective and prosperous, it’s also foolish to head out into the unknown without assistance. A millionaire success mentor can lead you into glorious places you never imagined because you’ve never gone there before. You might not even know anyone who has been there.

Some Misconceptions About Becoming a Successful Millionaire

To become wealthy and successful, most of us have to deal with this type of thinking.

1. It’s beyond reach. To this, Marshall Sylver replies that it’s not difficult, it’s just different.

2. You don’t have the time. People who are working longer than they would choose to work can’t see how they could do what it would take to become a millionaire. Building on the idea that it’s not hard, it’s just different, {you first have to change your strategy. Rather than thinking about exchanging time for dollars, wealthy people exchange value for their generous incomes. By providing high value, you can generate a much larger income in much less time.

3. You don’t have what it takes. If you believe that wealthy people are clever, more educated, or have to be born in certain kinds of families, reconsider. The truth is that individuals who have lower intelligence, less education, and lower social status are in just as good a position to get rich as “more gifted” people. The key is in your thinking. If you believe it’s possible, it is.

The Whole Truth About the Value of a Wealthy Success Coach

The underlying truth is that this is a friendly universe. If you are seeking a greater life, then it is possible. You have a built-in connection to an infinite intelligence whose goal is to help you to have everything you require to live fully as much as you do. A millionaire success mentor can help you to shift your limiting beliefs about your true identity, what you are capable of, and what you can achieve.

It’s normal to want to have more, accomplish more, and become a better person. You are here to be fully alive and grow. It might be that some unsuccessful and not too prosperous people you know are telling you that it’s unrealistic to imagine that you can break free of your current situation. How would they know? If you want the real truth, you have to listen to a millionaire success mentor like Marshall Sylver. Tie into someone who has done what you hope to do.

Want More Information?

Find out now about Marshall Sylver’s new Get Rich Radio Show, and discover how you can get paid to learn.

Also, if you want more tips on success and prosperity, learn about The Science of Getting Rich.



 A Strong Minded Woman


A Strong Minded Woman


$24.55


When Mary Livermore died in 1905 at age 84, a Boston newspaper praised her as “America’s foremost woman.” A leading figure in the struggle for woman’s rights as well as in the temperance movement, she was as widely recognized during her lifetime as Susan B. Anthony, and for a time the most popular and highly paid female orator in the country. Yet aside from Civil War historians familiar with her service as a wartime nurse, few today remember even her name. In this book, Wendy Hamand Venet reconstructs Mary Livermore’s remarkable story and explores how and why she became so renowned in her day. Born and raised in Boston, Livermore left home at age eighteen to become the private schoolteacher to a wealthy tobacco planter’s children in Virginia, an experience that afforded her an intimate look at slave-based society in the 1840s. Returning to New England, she married and lived a conventional life as the wife of a minister and mother of three daughters. With the coming of the Civil War, however, Livermore’s life changed dramatically when she became active with the United States Sanitary Commission, an organization that would propel her into the public limelight and cause her to challenge society’s traditional view of the role of women. After the war Livermore became deeply involved in the woman’s rights movement, serving as editor of the newspaper Woman’s Journal and later as president of three major suffrage organizations-the American, New England, and Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Associations. She was also founder and president of the Massachusetts Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and became active in the Society of Christian Socialists in Boston. Her frequent speaking appearances on behalf of these causes eventually earned her the nickname “Queen of the Platform.” Although she may not have been as radical as some other early feminists, Livermore’s ideas resonated with thousands of middle-class women whose experiences paralleled her own. For th

 A Strong-Minded Woman: The Life of Mary Livermore


A Strong-Minded Woman: The Life of Mary Livermore


$25.75


When Mary Livermore died in 1905 at age 84, a Boston newspaper praised her as America’s foremost woman. A leading figure in the struggle for woman’s rights as well as in the temperance movement, she was widely recognized during her lifetime as Susan B. Anthony, and for a time the most popular and highly paid female orator in the country. Yet aside from Civil War historians familiar with her service as a wartime nurse, few today remember even her name. In this book, Wendy Hamand Venet reconstructs Mary Livermore’s remarkable story and explores how and why she became so renowned in her day. Born and raised in Boston, Livermore left home at age eighteen to become the private schoolteacher to a wealthy tobacco planter’s children in Virginia, an experience that afforded her an intimate look at slave-based society in the 1840s. Returning to New England, she married and lived a conventional life as the wife of a minister and mother of three daughters. With the coming of the Civil War, however, Livermore’s life changed dramatically when she became active with the United States Sanitary Commission, an organization that would propel her into the public limelight and cause her to challenge society’s traditional view of the role of women. After the war Livermore became deeply involved in the woman’s rights movement, serving as editor of the newspaper Woman’s Journal and later as president of three major suffrage organizations–the American, New England, and Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Associations. She was also founder and president of the Massachusetts Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and became active in the Society of Christian Socialists in Boston. Her frequent speaking appearance onbehalf of these causes eventually earned her the nickname Queen of the Platform. Although she may not have been as radical as some other early feminists, Livermore’s ideas resonated with thousands of middle-class women whose experiences paralleled her own. For that reason alone, Venet sh