The author of this book was apparently the founder of two highly successful companies. I think the secret to his success is hatching schemes like getting people to plop down $30 for a book telling people that they can be "lazy" and have everything they've ever dreamed of. The problem is the book goes on to ramble about hippie pseudo-metaphysics for 200 pages but never really gives any advice whatsoever other than "do what you love and success will follow." Closely related to that theme is "if you are doing what you love, you are actually being lazy even if you work 16 hours a day, because you are not really working." I have heard that advice six thousand times before. A major flaw in this argument is that every job has a lot of unpleasant routine work, and this philopophy of only doing what you love accounts for many of the bankrupt musicians, writers, and people perpetually starting their own businesses. Furthermore, I was hoping to learn how to find more efficient, effective ways to accomplish the same amount of work -- instead all I got was essentially advice saying "you should find more effective ways to accomplish tasks" without any direction on how to do so. To add insult to injury, this guy used the hippie-aesthetic from his youth to talk about how making money is nature's way of saying that you're zen is on the right cosmic track. If that isn't an encapsulation of the Yuppie justifications of that generation and their failed ideals, I don't know what is. And then the plug for the Maharishi - jeez, even the Beatles ended up rejecting that guy as a fraud. The plusses of this book - nice cartoons, easy to read, and mildly inspirational for me to find more effective ways to get things done. But come to think of it, I was already inspired to do that before I read this -- why else would have I bought it?