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Author Bio: Your Credit ScoreYour Credit ScoreAuthor Bio
Liz Pulliam Weston is a personal finance columnist whose twice-weekly columns for MSN Money reach more than six million people each month. She's also the author of the question-and-answer column Money Talk, which appears in the Los Angeles Times and other newspapers throughout the country. Weston is a weekly guest on CNBC's Power Lunch and has appeared on NBC, Fine Living, PAX TV, and other networks.
Formerly a personal finance writer for the Times, Weston has won numerous reporting awards. She was part of a three-member writing team that won a Gerald Loeb Award for coverage of the Comparator Systems penny stock scandal in 1997. She also was a member of the Anchorage Daily News team that won a Pulitzer Prize for Meritorious Public Service in 1989 for coverage of the alcoholism epidemic among native Alaskans.
Weston is a graduate of the certified financial planner training program at University of California, Irvine. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter.
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Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect Your Credit for Life
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Information that could save you thousands on credit and insurance...
...even help you get your next job!
Explains the rules, explodes the myths!
Up-to-the-minute information on today's radically new credit scoring system
from MSN/L.A. Times
personal finance journalist Liz Pulliam Weston
Your Credit Score:
How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial FutureLiz Pulliam Weston
Your credit score. It's a simple three-digit number, but it's rapidly becoming the most important number in your life.
It dictates whether you'll get credit, and what you'll pay. A bad credit score could cost you thousands on your next house or car. Insurers use it to set premiums. Landlords use it to choose renters. You must understand it. But there's an immense amount of misinformation, obsolete data, and flat-out nonsense out theremdand some of it can cost you a fortune.
In Your Credit Score, MSN/L.A. Times personal finance journalist Liz Pulliam Weston comes to the rescue with specific, up-to-date answers you can trust. Weston explains how to bounce back from bad credit or bankruptcymdand tells you exactly how credit counseling, debt negotiation, and other credit "solutions" can affect your score. Along the way, Weston exposes the myths about credit scoring that can cost you real money if you fall for them.
Your Credit Score gives you what you need most: an action plan for building your credit, fixing it, and maintaining itmdstarting today!How many credit cards should you have... ..and what should you know about carrying balances?Whichcredit inquiries hurt your score? ...and which don't? Will closing accounts really help your credit score? You may be surprised at the answer.How credit counseling doesmdand doesn'tmdaffect your score Crucial new information, straight from the source.The fastest way to improve your credit score Who can actually helpmdand who'll rip you off?What you should do before you apply for a mortgage An action plan that could save you thousands of dollars.
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
The author of the nationally syndicated newspaper column "Money Talk" has come out with a highly readable and useful book on credit scores. Starting off with introductory information on what credit scores are, she takes us through how and why they were developed, how to determine an individual's score, how to improve one's score, and how to deal with a "credit crisis" such as bankruptcy, divorce, job loss, and other events that can wreck one's credit score. She also covers two frequently overlooked areas, the effect of identity theft on credit scores and the correlation between credit scores and insurance rates. Although somewhat repetitive, this work provides thorough coverage of its topic; the numerous anecdotes increase readability and help sustain interest in what could otherwise be a fairly dry topic. Overall, a practical and informative book; recommended for public libraries.-Susan Hurst, Miami Univ. Libs. of Ohio, Oxford Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
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