Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 34
Great Story October 23, 2009 Mom (Maple Grove, MN USA) Love, love, love this story!! My husband is a stockbroker and mowed lawns to put himself through college so this story is near and dear to him. It is also a fun way to introduce kids to the stock marker and business in a very entertaining way. Love it!
Not bad October 16, 2009 World (pa, usa) Lawn Boy is a ok book, maybe for older kids, my son 9 years old. It was not a intresting for him as much as"secrets of a lab rat book".
My son loved it! September 21, 2009 L. Gardner Once my son started reading this he couldn't put it down until the end. I heard occasional laughter from him as he read.
Lawn Boy September 14, 2009 A. D. Cox (northern PA, USA) Lawn Boy
I've always been a natural entrepreneur. I remember my very first enterprise--such a classic. A variation of the sidewalk lemonade stand, the sweet catch was...the stock wasn't mine. It was the weekend of our annual family reunion. Remember those? It's when you see relatives that you won't even see at Christmas. You eat and drink to excess, and then promise that you will get together before the next wedding or funeral, knowing that you won't. I started off selling iced tea and lemonade for 25 cents a cup. "Hey, it was all profit, no overhead." Sales were strong, but if you aren't expanding, you're history.
I decided to add beer to my inventory. It's not a family reunion without beer. Business boomed. Until neighbor across the street called the cops, "Hey, how was I to know what a liquor license was?" I did add to my vocabulary, with juvenile delinquent and culpable deniability. I also learned one of the basic principles of economics, supply and demand.
I was young and broke and set out to do something about it, much like the main character in Lawn Boy by Gary Paulsen. It's the start of summer vacation, and our protagonist is wondering where he's going to get enough money for an inner tube for his old ten speed bike. His life changes when his grandmother gives him an old rider mower for his twelfth birthday.
Almost as soon as soon as he figures out how to run it, he's in business. By the second day he has eight mowing jobs, and is introduced to The Law of Increasing Product Demand versus Flat Production Capacity, better known as "fast approaching your limit". Three lawns a day, once a week, twenty-one lawns if he worked seven days, dawn to dark with no days off. At forty dollars a yard, great money, but it would mean no summer vacation.
Then he meets Arnold, a work at home stock broker who offers to barter. He will open a stock-market account in lieu of payment for cutting grass. Arnold not only invests the money, but offers business advice. Soon Lawn Boy has a partner, fifteen employees, a lot of money invested in the stock market, and is sponsoring a boxer named Joseph Powdermilk Jr. who comes in handy when Force of Arms and its Application to Business comes into play.
Learning the workings of the free-market economy has never been more fun. This book weaves the concepts of stock, the stock market, commissions, partnerships, employees, competition and more right into the fabric of the story. If you are looking for something entertaining to begin teaching third and fourth graders about finances and business, try this engaging book. Now, couldn't you go for an ice cold lemonade???
My daughter loved it! September 6, 2009 Jasmine My kids are reading more and this was I great book that kept my daughter's interest. She laughed while reading the book and its all ways a good thing when an author can keep kids interested in what they write. Pick up a copy for your kid. You won't be disappointed.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 34
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