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The more well-known books are those by Tom Hegna for retirement planning:
Paychecks and Playchecks: Retirement Solutions for Life
[EXTERNAL LINK] - Amazon.com
This book has 315 ratings on Amazon.
Don't Worry, Retire Happy: Seven Steps to Retirement Security
[EXTERNAL LINK] - Amazon.com
This book has 129 ratings on Amazon.
David McKnight's The Power of Zero: How to get to the 0% tax bracket and Transform Your Retirement
[EXTERNAL LINK] - Amazon.com
McKnight's book has nearly 2,600 ratings on Amazon.
Thank you for taking the time to post the comments and the links.I don't know who Terry Savage is.
Laurence Kotlikoff would add to these areas. Here you go:
I can't get to zero. I will see what McKnight says in his new book about Gurus and those 18 retirement risks you talked about.
I think Hegna's book, Don't Worry, Retire Happy is what I will start with out of the additional things you suggested.
Last year I was trying to decide about making a recommendation to take Social Security early when the payments would be offset by earnings.
I ran onto reports by Kotlikoff and Savage about ruthless clawbacks of old SS "overpayments". I decided taking the early SS when it was going to be accompanied by job earnings offsets was not worth the risk of future challenges by SS for incorrect computations.
Anyway, that's where her name came up for me.
Based on some other comments I saw made by Kotlikoff, I had considered attempting, back then, to ask you about Financial financial planning vs Economist financial planning, but decided I did not have the reading speed, reading comprehension, and level of critical thinking that would have been necessary for me to uphold my end of the conversation.