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Reviews for Audit and Accounting Guide of Employee Benefit Plans

 Audit and Accounting Guide of Employee Benefit Plans magazine reviews

The average rating for Audit and Accounting Guide of Employee Benefit Plans based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-11-08 00:00:00
2000was given a rating of 4 stars Keith Gagnon
Hi-larious. Seriously, this is the funniest thing I've read in a long time. Betsy Howie is closer than she'd like to be to forty and realizing that the baby issue (will I? won't I?) has be answered: she will. It's said that it costs approximately $190,000.00 to raise a child from birth to age 18 and Howie is going to find out if that's true or not. Literally. She begins Callie's Tally, a listing of every expense that can be attributed to her child...and bills her for it. Yup, Callie's not even born yet and she's already in debt. And it only gets worse from there. Howie provides detailed explanations for the charges and each is assigned a category (i.e. 1 Pampers Original - Sanitation). She debates some of the charges and provides reasoning for why she did or not bill Callie for the expense. It turns out that there are tons of billable items and Howie gets creative--weight watchers fees. The invoice from the lawyer for creating a will. The ultra-adorable clothes Howie buys for friends' children as gifts from Callie(all the while knowing that the outfit will make its way back to Callie eventually). But the book isn't just about Callie's tab; it's about the first year in the life of a new mother. It's about her exhaustion and fear. Joy and exhaustion. Guilt...and exhaustion. She talks candidly about her feelings, always with humor and wit. I loved this book. It's funny and endearing and honest. One of my favorite lines: "I would not make a good single mom. I require unionized breaks." I fully intend to bill my future child in the same manner (and btw--that ultra adorable diaper bag that I lusted after ever since I saw it despite the fact that I am neither currently pregnant, nor planning to get knocked up any time soon and then found for 75% off? first debt). Even now I am seeing my bank statement and receipts in a new light: Food Lion--$7.09--Dr. Pepper: Sanity. The Gap--$47.98--Jeans: fat clothes for the all the weight I've gained recently. Best Buy--$31.47--Wii game: entertainment to keep mind off broken heart. Of course now that I look over these recent expenditures, I realize that I should actually be billing my ex-boyfriend since all can be attributed to him. Excuse me while I prepare his invoice...
Review # 2 was written on 2014-06-26 00:00:00
2000was given a rating of 3 stars Nancy Lehnberg
Fabulous book, just fabulous. Mother, non-mother, thinking about motherhood, not thinking about motherhood; this is a great book. My copy was sadly lost to time and two moves, but my husband finally broke down and bought me a used copy online after forcing him to stop at every clearance book bin put on creation. The first time I read it I was 22, single, and babies weren't even a blip on my radar. The blip still hasn't appeared after five years and a wedding, but I still feel like I can identify with Betsy. This book is on my list of all-time favorites, possibly even in the top five, simply because she's so brutally honest about her pregnancy, the baby, and the impact an infant has had on her life. Betsy charges the darling girl for all baby-incurred expenses (maternity clothing, bottles, diapers, Weight Watchers meetings, etc.) to both track the baby's life and to keep her grasp over who rules the roost. A baby can demand a feeding at three a.m., but Mom can invoice for the rocking chair said screaming infant required to sleep...


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