In richly told stories and wild self-experiments, historian Joseph Moore tests history’s best and worst financial advice to find what worked, what didn’t, and why everyday people can still get ahead—including you.
What if so-called timeless beliefs about money like “invest for the long run,” “compound interest builds wealth,” and “real estate always goes up” were shockingly new . . . and rarely true.
From Benjamin Franklin to TikTok gurus, what “everyone knows” about personal finance has rarely stayed the same. Parents once taught children not to save and that stocks were only for suckers. Meanwhile, supposedly new phenomenon like AirBnb, crypto, skipping lattes, and complaints that nobody can get ahead are far older than we think.
In How to Get Rich in American History, Joseph Moore presents the first ever history of financial advice in the US, sharing the unexpected and counter-intuitive lessons of the past—from the scams we keep falling for to the long allure of creating generational wealth—so we can avoid the same mistakes and make the most of our own finances today.
Along the way, Moore tries these old ideas on himself, with hair-raising and hilarious results. His personal journey includes wild investments, get-rich-quick schemes, founding a cryptocurrency, and how he went from his working-class roots and facing financial ruin to retiring in his forties. Ultimately, Moore finds that despite today’s loud pessimists, success has never been easier to achieve in American history than it is right now.
Fun, accessible, and filled with eye-opening insights you can apply for yourself alongside laugh out loud stories you never learned in school, How to Get Rich in American History pushes back against skeptics who claim the American Dream is out of reach. It is a thoughtful, practical, and surprisingly hopeful read that sheds new light on the prospects of getting by and getting ahead then . . . and now.
Title alpha How to Get Rich in American History: 300 Years of Financial Advice That Worked (& Didn't)
Category Nonfiction High Plus
Pages Count 352
Genre Nonfiction
Topics Personal finance. Money. United States history.
Trim Size 9" x 6"
JLG Span Fall
Language English
Rights type Print
Publication date 2026-04-27
JLG Release Date Jul 2026
Minimum grade 9
Maximum grade 12
Reading level High
Format Print
Nonfiction High Plus (Grades 9 & Up)
Nonfiction High Plus
Nonfiction High Plus (Grades 9 & Up)
For Grades 9 & Up
This collection features engaging nonfiction titles, curated for teen readers who are curious about the world and eager to explore big ideas. Covering topics such as history, science, pop culture, and biography, selections emphasize strong storytelling, thoughtful research, and accessible presentation. Some selections are written for adults but are thoughtfully chosen for their relevance and appeal to teen readers.
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