I had an incredibly difficult time trying to stay attentive while listening to this book. It was not a long book, thankfully. It wasn’t an issue with the narrator. It was the content. It didn’t seem to really say anything. The book says it is about “Resilient Investment Strategies Through Biomimicry”. One example was evolution, and from evolution you are told to change your thoughts over time. Another example is to focus locally, like a plant would, by looking at local investments. Throughout, the book read like a new-age spiritual self help guide, more like Eckhart Tolle than Benjamin Graham.
There were quite a few things I didn’t appreciate in this book:
I found the “learnings” from looking at nature to be so basic as to not be useful in the real world. Instead of providing investing guidelines that I would expect given the book’s title, the author tries to provide more a philosophy of how you should decide to invest.
For every example the author came up with based on nature, I could think of the opposite in nature as well. When you base your arguments on analogies, you really need to care about the likely thoughts in the reader’s head trying to validate your suggestions.
The word “investments” in the title does not really mean “personal investing”. The author can be considered a Wall Street type, and I found many of the examples relate more to putting together something like a mutual fund or an estate plan rather than individual investing. By the end of the book, the author expands the meaning to include investments of time and thought. If you are a Wall Street type writing a book on investments, maybe people will make an assumption that they can use the advice for their investments. This book did not offer much of this advice.
In the end, what I think happened here is that the author, who had classwork in Biomimicry, started noticing she could use those kinds of examples to explain what she saw happening with her research team at Fidelity and in the economic world, and decided to extend these observations into a book. It’s like saying that cloud looks like a bear – I’m not sure you’re going to get much of an opportunity to make money based on that observation. In this case, the author took the concept beyond its limits. Nice try. I would definitely consider other books by the author given her writing style and her work experience, but they would have to be on finance and not new age topics.