March/April 2006
LIVING ON LESS
5
Books Every Frugal Household Needs
BY HEATHER T. SHAW
Are you trying to save money and live a simpler life? I have five
wonderful books I use on a weekly, if not daily, basis that help save
money on home repair, the food bill, holiday gift giving and more. These
books can save you time, help you use the time you have more effectively
and free you up for the activities that are truly valuable and
meaningful to you and your family:
-
The Complete
Tightwad Gazette, Amy Dacyczyn. This wonderful book is a
compilation of Dacyczyn’s excellent newsletter, cram-packed with
great ideas for saving money, recycling, using what you have on hand
and getting the most value for your money. Her idea for creating a
"price book" — a listing of the best price and location for every
item on your grocery shopping list — can help you start saving on
your grocery bill immediately. Dacyczyn offers financial ideas and
strategies for parents who would prefer to have one parent at home
full time with the children and has excellent tips from readers
including paying less for your new car, making your own Christmas
gifts, cooking from inexpensive recipes and low-cost home moving.
Although she has been occasionally accused of focusing too much time
on child-related information, this book has good tips for all ages,
whether you’re a young, single student, a family or a retired
couple, and it’s equally interesting to both genders.
-
How to Fix Damn
Near Everything, Franklynn Peterson. We have used this
how-to guide to fix a clothes dryer and several leaky faucets;
install a new kitchen faucet and a bathroom sink; and make several
TV repairs. This book is very handy if you can bear to sift through
the tedium and follow Peterson’s excellent step-by-step directions,
accompanied by superb technical illustrations by an uncredited
illustrator. Although excruciatingly boring to this reader, Peterson
also covers the art of reading electronic schematic drawings and
"mechanical hang-ups in listening equipment." In a rare moment of
levity, Peterson’s practical advice regarding measuring will make
you laugh: "The art of measuring is one of the biggest mental blocks
in the repair field. More grief and sloppy work have resulted from
people who could and wanted to do better but did not because of bad
measurements. When measuring a board, belt, bolt, or bauble, if you
say, ‘That looks like 3 ¼"and a little more,’ you’ll never get past
the ‘hammer it till the damn thing fits’ stage." My edition came out
in 1977 and I was unable to find a revised edition, so such things
as DVD players and VCRs are not covered, but this is a good book to
consult before taking out a second mortgage for the plumbing bill.
-
The Joy of Cooking,
Irma S. Rombauer and Marion Rombauer Becker. If I could only have
one cookbook on a desert island (!) this would be the one. No glossy
pictures of melting chocolate to torment one, no shiny, perfectly
poached eggs, no Technicolor green vegetables glistening with
butter, but packed with good, solid, reliable recipes with infinite
variations, providing a bible of sorts for the beginner cook and a
well thumbed reference for the more experienced. I turn to this book
again and again (and it has the grimy fingerprints, gravy stains,
cookie dough splatters and ripped binding to prove it) as the first
book I look to when I want to cook a meal using only what I have on
hand or when I am baking. There is nothing fancy or particularly
inspiring in its pages, but I treasure my copy, which arrived in my
husband’s boxes of stored items, unused and pristine, when we were
married 13 years ago. One note: I have a strong preference for the
early versions of this cookbook. Some of the later versions after
this one (dated 1988,) have taken an experimental twist to generate
more sales and are not as reliable as the basic recipes I turn to
Joy for.
-
Organize Yourself!
Ronni Eisenberg with Kate Kelly. Here you’ll find wonderful ideas on
how to organize everything from a job search to post-pregnancy to
traveling with children to purchasing clothing. There’s a section on
establishing a useful household notebook with lists of things "To
Buy," "To Fix," "To Call" and "To Do," and tips on paying taxes and
melding two households. My favorite section, "15 Ways to Use a
Kitchen Timer," suggests using the timer when two preschoolers argue
over whose turn it is to play with a toy and as a way to get started
exercising, setting it for 10 minutes and telling yourself you’ll
exercise for just 10 minutes (although this never works for me).
-
Your Money or Your
Life, Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin. This inspiring book can
help you get out of debt, figure out your priorities and live well
for less money. The authors recommend keeping track of every
expenditure and adding up the value of every possession to figure
out your net worth. This exercise alone will earn you money as you
will immediately want to have a yard sale and get rid of all unused
items. The focus is on choosing how you will spend your life and
your time and then finding a way to finance this through
conservative investments and making conscious spending choices.
Here’s hope for every broke, indebted, stressed-out person commuting
hours in traffic to a meaningless job.
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