I liked Lachs's earnest trying-to-help attitude. He includes practical advice for planning ahead with money and life-style and gives references. I did not like his patronizing talking-down-to attitude. I guess that arrogance is part of being a doctor.
He hints about the faults of the system but always protecting it, one has to read between the lines to see it is worse than his hints. Most people are probably unaware of the pitfalls he brings out about the medical system.
The issues he discusses here are relevant to patients of every age, not just elders.
The chapter beginning quotes cited were entertaining and thought-provoking. The book–ending quote by Will Rogers was: "One must wait until evening to see how splendid the day has been."
Inferior binding: "Penguin Books, Published by the Penguin Group" has poorly published the hardback I read, the pages were bound sloppily (a few pages were even incompletely bound and hanging) and the paper quality was inferior. I guess the price of $17 reflected that.