I was torn between 4 and 5 stars for this one. On the one hand, there is great advice in here and millenials really need to be doing more to take control of our financial lives. On the other hand, the author has had significant advantages, which she acknowledges, that many of us never get. It's hard to take advice from someone who didn't really just figure it out and do it all on her own, which is what many of us will be forced to do. The author's parents, for example, are well-versed in the stock market, presently millionaires, and were able to give her the guidance and support to get started, including the encouragement of entrepreneurial and thrifty habits. As she puts it, she probably did take more risk knowing she had a safety net in her family.
Stressing that you need to have your financial safety mask on before you get started (months of income set aside), for example, seems a bit absurd and prohibitive - and disjointed from the experience of many lower class Americans.
That said, I hope this helps some of us who are getting started and are without parents who have financial knowledge to share, or who can give us cars, or subsidize our student debt, or whatever. Congrats if you do, but you can't possibly relate to those who are struggling to make our way financially without that. Many of us have NO help or safety net, and I hope that we write our own books after we learn from our own investment experiences, which will be decidedly different from what is described in this book.
TLDR: this book contains great advice for middle-class millennials, not broke ones.