Ackerman and Mancuso explain all the legal formalities involved in forming and operating a tax-exempt nonprofit corporation, providing detailed information on differences among all 50 states.
The first chapter helped me to determine that forming a nonprofit corporation for our Somali Reads project is probably not necessary at this time. (The deciding factor was that we'd have to raise $50,000 a year before getting any tax breaks, and our budget is less than $10,000 for this project.)
I would definitely suggest this book for anyone looking at starting a nonprofit organization.
This book is good, particularly if you are starting a community nonprofit (dance studio, school, etc.). It has a CD-ROM with all the forms you'll need and step-by-step instructions for how to use them. The writing is good and straight-forward. It is what it is, but within that realm, it's a good tool.
Really useful book that walks you through everything step by step. If the information you're looking for isn't contained in the book they point you to exactly where to find it on the internet.
This book carefully and effectively guided me through the process of starting an incorporated nonprofit elementary school (that I successfully ran for a decade). It breaks everything down into manageable steps and provides great examples.
This is a thorough technical guide to what you need to do to start a nonprofit. It's well written and way less cheesy than a lot of the books out there on this subject.
Very good overview of forming a nonprofit with some limited information on states. Not just for lawyers. The problem is it doesn't get very state specific--so it's decent for the 1023, but not as great for the initial state incorporation stages.