Getting What You Want: How to Reach Agreement and Resolve Conflict Every Time (Plume) Review
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There might be redundancies, and "Triangle Talk" is simply the definition of the word "compromise", given a snazzy buzzword. But the book is cheap and it does have some good information, which is presented in a readable fashion.
The Fast Track in the back of the book is a great feature, and it's the primary reason I'm writing a review.
Many books on this subject have thin ideas and thick vocabulary, padded with a lot of fluff. This book skips the fluff and is really like a book of notes taken while reading many other Self-Help Relationship books.
You can read through the notes and refrence the full explanation if needed. In this way you can read the book without a bookmark. You can keep it on the shelf for reference after you've firmly put a tip into practice.
The grandaddy of books like this is How to Have Confidence and Power in Dealing with People by Les Giblin, who really summed up and expanded on Dale Carnegie.
I highly recommend Les Giblin's book, it should be a school textbook.
Getting What You Want, is an easy buy, didn't undo anything I learned from Giblin, plus Kare Anderson makes some nice additions, Velcro Praise jumps to mind.
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