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Moneymatics: Where Money and Mathematics Meet emanates from the
sincere concern for the level of basic financial illiteracy among
college students. It is discouraging that very few mechanisms are
in place to educate today's college student about money management
and its role in fostering a healthy spending and saving diet. This
textbook serves as a spark in the lives of college students and
piques their interest to pursue an understanding of the presented
concepts even more. Through a deliberate and joint effort, students
can be equipped with the weapons they need to combine their love
for money with their passion for mathematics or, Moneymatics.
"I managed to get my phone and started walking. I couldn't die like
this. Those two-second pauses felt like what I thought was death,
and I wouldn't go out without a fight. I was barefoot and shirtless
and thought maybe I needed some fresh air. It didn't register with
me that it was twenty-nine degrees outside. I opened the door and
walked outside in just my pants. As I made the call, some lady, who
was bundled up from head to toe, stared at me as if I had lost all
of my senses. She looked at my bare feet and bare chest and noticed
how I was shaking as I was trying to dial the number." This scene
provides the backdrop for one of the many battles that Bernard L.
Dillard faces in Lemonade, a coming-of-age story, which highlights
his persistence, faith, and triumph as he journeys toward the
ever-elusive space called manhood. Exposed to the goods, the bads,
and the uglies of Dillard's world, readers can't help but
sympathize with, cheer for, and laugh out loud at a man, who is
trying his best to find the most stable path that leads from boy to
man. Written like a novel and presented in bite-sized chapters,
Lemonade is indeed a page-turner. Throughout these pages, Dillard
shares the story behind his success. Through candor, vulnerability,
and a tinge of wit, Dillard describes how he overcame his own sense
of adversity. Although he has held many of these shocking details
close to the vest, he now exposes past wounds in his own life with
the hopes of encouraging others to succeed despite their own
feelings of injury and loss. Simply, it is a tale of triumph and
unmasks what happens when one learns how to win with the hand of
life that is dealt. In a nutshell, Dillard stands in life's
kitchen, gathers his ingredients, and shows us what to make when
all there seems to be is a basket full of lemons.
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