Rating: Summary: I own my own business thanks to Quark! Review: A great book to keep in your pocket (and to memorize). Besides some slight descrepencies, this is a great book, not meant to be serious, but meant to be used in times of true need. Ah, I remember many the time I used Rule of Aquisition #40 "She can touch your lobes but never your latinum" on my girlfriend. And, as the introduction reads, be sure to send off for Quark's Guild to Oo-mox, you'll sure be glad you did!
Rating: Summary: Rule #141 - Only fools pay retail! Review: A great little precursor to "Legends of the Ferengi." Giving the timing of this little treasure, it's a very good trek extra. As far as it being rules to live by, I don't know about that. For collector's sake, this is a pure must to have! It's definitely worth the nominal fee. (Just don't pay retail)
Rating: Summary: Rule #141 - Only fools pay retail! Review: A great little precursor to "Legends of the Ferengi." Giving the timing of this little treasure, it's a very good trek extra. As far as it being rules to live by, I don't know about that. For collector's sake, this is a pure must to have! It's definitely worth the nominal fee. (Just don't pay retail)
Rating: Summary: Rule #141 - Only fools pay retail! Review: A great little precursor to "Legends of the Ferengi." Giving the timing of this little treasure, it's a very good trek extra. As far as it being rules to live by, I don't know about that. For collector's sake, this is a pure must to have! It's definitely worth the nominal fee. (Just don't pay retail)
Rating: Summary: A disappointing value for money spent. Review: As a long-time student of Star Trek and the Ferengi, I was disappointed with the inaccuracies in this book, and with its sheer superficiality. (Misquote a slew of "rules," slap 'em on paper, put a cover around it, and pass it off as a "book.")
Rating: Summary: A good wife is a luxury; a smart accountant is a necessity. Review: From the latinum-tongued Ferengi come many witty verbal gems and commonplaces that we hew-mons would do well to commit to memory. Entertaining, insightful and hilarious, the Rules of Acquisition are a treasure not to be neglected by any Star Trek fan, or any cold-hearted, fiscally relentless money-monger. Be the life of the party as you enlighten your friends and family with these sharp-tongued Rules. And make sure to charge them for it. After all, free advice is seldom cheap.
Rating: Summary: FERENGI RULES, NOT HUMAN RULES. Review: i dont think that you should put the FERENGI rules into HUMAN rules, especially with buisness and finances, because in the ferengi government buildings, for example, you have to pay to sit down. these are FERENGI RULES, not HUMAN RULES
Rating: Summary: Offensive suggestions as rules for todays businesses Review: I had purchased this book based on recommendations about the rules in them. After reviewing them, I found the content to be offensive. There are such rules as "Females and Finances Don't Mix". Although many of the rules were pragmatic, they just did not appeal to my management team. I removed it from our reading list. There could be cause for a lawsuit if you pass it around in your organization.
Rating: Summary: hmmmm Review: I kind of wanted to know all of the rule
Rating: Summary: Star Trek Deep Space Nine: The Ferengi rules of Acquisition Review: I originally bought this book hoping to get the entire list of 285 Rules. Guess what -- the book only has 70 of the Rules. The reason being, that the full list was never revealed on the series. (Yes, there are apocryphal lists of the rest of the Rules circulating in cyberspace, but they are fan-written and not canonical Trek. Hence, they are not included in this book.) Perhaps more Rules will be made public in future movies. The book does have some blank spaces at the back to list new Rules as the appear. But until they do, we'll have to be content with the 70 Rules we have, because, as Quark says on page vi, "I doubt you humans could handle much more." This is a pocket-sized book that simply lists the Rules for handy reference, along with some B&W stills from the series. It doesn't tell you anything about the cultural context, history or practical application(s) of the Rules -- for that, you should get "Legends of the Ferengi," also by Ira Steven Behr & friends. Before I go any further, I should clarify that, contrary to popular stereotypes, the Ferengi are NOT supposed to be based on Jews. (They are based on "Yankee Traders" -- see TNG episode "The Last Outpost.") As a rabbi who is also a Trekker, I can tell you that some of these Rules go directly against true Jewish values: "When in doubt, lie" (#266) would violate the Ten Commandments, as would "Never ask when you can take" (#52). "Females and finances don't mix" (#94) isn't very Jewish either, since the Book of Proverbs clearly says of the virtuous woman that "she considers a field and buys it; with her profits she plants a vineyard." In the "ultra-orthodox" Hasidic world that some fans [wrongly] believe these rules are spoofing, the women frequently have their own businesses. So no, Ferengi culture is not Jewish culture. The only reason people think the Ferengi are a metaphor for Jews is because the old stereotype says that Jews love money, and the Ferengi really *do* love money -- but then again, doesn't everybody love money? As Rule #284 states, "Deep down everyone is a Ferengi." And that's the reason this book is so much fun. The Ferengi Rules spoof the world of business in a way that lets us all admit that financial success is OK. In a society where we are all supposed to idealistically disdain money as "the root of all evil" but where, in real life, we all need money to survive, the straightforward greed of the Ferengi culture let's us have a good laugh at ourselves -- and frees us up to pursue our own success. I keep a copy of the Rules on my desk, and have sometimes used them in the Ferengi section of the Amazon community (otherwise known as "Auctions and ZShops") to give good feedback. What buyer doesn't smile at being told that "Good customers are as rare as latinum -- treasure them" (#57). Conversely, the Rules provide a humorous way to deal with all those net spammers who want my time for free -- because, after all, "Anything worth doing is worth doing for money" (#13). I could go on and on, but I'll end this review here, even though "Enough is... never enough" (#97.)
|