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omqchristi 's review for:
Pick Three: You Can Have It All (Just Not Every Day)
by Randi Zuckerberg
Readability: 4/5
Plot: 1/5
Recommend: No
Pick Three documents how Randi Zuckerberg balances her life through five main categories: work, fitness, family, sleep, and friends.
The book contains 7 main sections: the introduction, the five categories, and worksheets/tips. As I was reading this book, I felt like most of what was the key points could be summed up in the first 10-30 pages (the introduction) and through the tips in specified boxes (or at the end); You need to pick three of the five categories every day to live an imbalanced (and therefore balanced) life. The rest of the book can be a little redundant and isn't necessary to practice Randi Zuckerberg's Pick Three mantra. The book is quite easy to get through if you really want to, I'd just recommend skimming it over rather than reading each and every word.
Plot: 1/5
Recommend: No
Pick Three documents how Randi Zuckerberg balances her life through five main categories: work, fitness, family, sleep, and friends.
The book contains 7 main sections: the introduction, the five categories, and worksheets/tips. As I was reading this book, I felt like most of what was the key points could be summed up in the first 10-30 pages (the introduction) and through the tips in specified boxes (or at the end); You need to pick three of the five categories every day to live an imbalanced (and therefore balanced) life. The rest of the book can be a little redundant and isn't necessary to practice Randi Zuckerberg's Pick Three mantra. The book is quite easy to get through if you really want to, I'd just recommend skimming it over rather than reading each and every word.