Publications

The Bogleheads' Guide to Retirement Planning

Type
Link
Cost
Paid
Published
2009

Whatever your current financial situation, you must continue to strive for a viable retirement plan by finding the most effective ways to save, the best accounts to save in, and the right amount to save. The Bogleheads' Guide to Retirement Planning is filled with valuable advice on a wide range of retirement planning issues, including some pearls of wisdom from Bogle himself. With The Bogleheads' Guide to Retirement Planning, you'll discover exactly what it takes to secure your financial future, today.

Praise for The Bogleheads' Guide to Retirement Planning


"Meet the wisest and most generous crowd on Wall Street: the Bogleheads. Now, for the first time between these covers, the Bogleheads assemble their formidable collective expertise on retirement planning. Savor, enjoy, and learn."

William J. Bernstein, author of The Investor's Manifesto


"The Bogleheads' Guide to Retirement Planning delivers the power of the community. Each chapter may have its own author, yet all have been molded by the remarkable Bogleheads community, resulting in a wonderful book that offers readers a slew of practical suggestions and a hefty serving of carefully calibrated advice."

Jonathan Clements, author of The Little Book of Main Street Money


"The Bogleheads have done it again! The web's savviest and most caring investment consortium has gathered all the information you'll need to plot a safe and sane course toward retirement. Their camaraderie, kindness, and commonsense wisdom will steel you to 'stay the course' and realize your retirement dreams. "

Don Phillips, Managing Director, Morningstar


"This not-for-profit collaborative enterprise answers recurrent questions raised by members of the Bogleheads online forum with clarity, wisdom, and humor. It exposes fallacies, suggests alternatives, and reassures the thorough planner. It is a welcome contribution to a world where unrestrained greed and complex financial arrangements have capsized many. I keep referring back to it."

Ed Tower, Professor of Economics, Duke University