Overall, the book was rather cohesive. Each chapter ensues its predecessor with ease, and the book possesses a rather low understandability ranking per the average user.
I believe the weighty, staple-bound paper stack is often misunderstood to be a dense, complex treatise, when in truth, it contains the ability to be understood upon satisfaction of one critical requirement. The completion of which shall elevate the reader to a newer and brighter standard of understanding, comprehensibility, and even moral acumen and behavior.
This requirement is, unfortunately, exceedingly simple. The "unfortunately" from the previous sentence speaks to the slothfulness and idleness of those who must act upon the book - not to be acted upon by the book. Far too many exam-preparers are fearful of large textbooks. They conceal themselves in the cave shadows of the impostrous proposition that they "do not like to read" or "are visual learners." These statements are fraudulent and lead students directly to an exam score of 70, a broken soul, divorce, and inevitable destruction by depression.
To understand the book, one must read the book. Then, and only then, will your blindness become vision, your idleness become discipline, and your 70 become a 90. Treasures, kingdoms, and a below-average salary await those who heed these words and attack the Achilles heel of this beast.
Alas, all hail the CPA who conquers the FAR Exam!
(For the record, it took me just under 100 hours of reading and study time combined. Passed with a 93. Good luck!)
I didn’t read many books last year bc I was studying, then saw my study material was listed. I want credit for those pages! And I passed first try, so I gotta give 5 stars.