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E**F
Great help
Very helpful. Got it for my dad after my mother's passing. It is a way for him to tell us what he wants done without worries.
L**N
Death planner
Love this! Not as detailed as I was hoping but I was able to adjust some sections by altering some headers on the pages. No one gets out of here alive, don't make it harder on those that remain without you. My daughter laughed when I shared with her where she needs to look for unanswered questions.
K**K
Good
Comical way to fill out important information after your death
P**A
After death help
Not really what I was expecting, thought there be more pages for accounts and passwordsBut it will help those I leave behind
R**S
I think it's amazing
Love it
L**T
A Waste of Money
It's not funny. It serves minimally to guide one in planning for the inevitable. Lots of pages with nothing but lines (and page titles) on them. I tried to return the copy we ordered; Amazon gave us a refund and told us not to bother to return the book. It did fine in our recycling bin.
D**.
Pretty stupid book, but useful for building your own list.
The book, in itself, is pretty stupid. One of the first things I noticed is that under "Financial stutus [sic]" it listed a number of possible statuses, including "employed", "unemployed", and "small business owner", but NOT "retired" (you'd have to write that in under "Other"). Don't you think more than a few people feeling the need for collecting data for their next of kin might be in a "retired" status?The next thing I noticed was that it said "stutus" instead of "status" - what a prominent misprint!! Not much quality control, I guess.It was also annoying that this was designed for a single individual. You could optionally list "spouse", but no obvious way to handle joint property/joint assets.Seriously, though, why would you want to list all of this stuff, handwritten, in a single, hard to copy, easy to misplace, book? If you're savvy enough to order the book online, you should be savvy enough to create a document on your computer with all this stuff, that can then be printed, saved, edited from time-to-time, shared electronically...Other weird stuff. It only includes space for four "bank accounts and credit cards", but lets you list FOURTEEN "properties". Wow. If you're such a real estate tycoon, you probably have a few more bank and credit card accounts, too. It has room for eight insurance policies. It lets you list up to four email accounts (address and PW only, no space for any other info, e.g., where the acct is hosted). It allows for up to three Facebook accts, three Instagram accts, and three "TW" accts (Twitter?), and lots of lines for "Other" online accts - short name and password only, no room for descriptions.And, boy! does it assume you have a lot to apologize for!I could go on. Overall, the book just seems silly and badly thought-out. The only use I can see is as a reference for building your own list - it won't include everything you might need, but it might remind you of things you would have left out.
L**T
Good book
Good for anyone
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