Lifetime Book Club: The Almanack of Naval Ravikant by Eric Jorgenson
“Seek wealth, not money or status. Wealth is having assets that earn while you sleep.”
That is one of the central ideas of The Almanack of Naval Ravikant.
In a world that often confuses busyness with success and income with wealth, this book offers a different perspective. One that suggests true wealth is freedom. Freedom over your time. Freedom over your decisions. Freedom to live life on your own terms.
This is not a step-by-step finance manual. It is a collection of distilled wisdom on how to build wealth and happiness without losing yourself along the way.
What It Is About
In The Almanack of Naval Ravikant, author Eric Jorgenson curates the most powerful ideas and reflections from entrepreneur and investor Naval Ravikant.
The book is split into two core themes: wealth and happiness.
On wealth, Naval challenges traditional thinking. He argues that wealth is not about trading time for money. It is about building assets, developing specific knowledge, and using leverage such as capital, code, or media to create scalable value.
On happiness, he turns inward. He explores how peace of mind, self-awareness, and reducing desire are often more powerful than chasing external success.
Throughout the book, the message is clear. You cannot separate wealth from mindset. How you think shapes how you earn, invest, and live.
Rather than offering rigid rules, the book encourages first-principles thinking. Understand how the world works. Make long-term bets on yourself. Play games you are uniquely suited to win.
What We Loved
This book feels expansive. Clear. Empowering.
Some chapters are only a page or two long, but they pack a punch. The ideas are simple, yet they challenge deeply held assumptions about work, money, and success.
One of the strongest messages is the importance of ownership. Not just owning assets, but owning your choices. Naval emphasises accountability and long-term thinking. Build specific knowledge. Be patient. Ignore the noise. Play long-term games with long-term people.
We also loved the focus on leverage. In today’s world, technology and media allow individuals to create impact at scale. That does not mean overnight success. It means building something once that can serve many.
And on the happiness side, the book offers a refreshing reminder. External achievement without internal peace is hollow. True wealth includes calm, perspective, and the ability to enjoy what you have built.
There is no hype. No hustle culture cheerleading. Just thoughtful, rational ideas about how to think better so you can live better.
Who It Is For
This book is for anyone who:
- Wants to build long-term wealth, not just earn a higher salary
- Is thinking about business, investing, or creating something of their own
- Feels successful but time-poor
- Is questioning the traditional career ladder
- Values independence and autonomy
- Enjoys philosophical thinking grounded in real-world application
It is particularly powerful for those in the “getting ahead” stage of life. Career building. Growing income. Making bigger financial decisions. It encourages readers to think beyond the next promotion and consider the bigger picture.
Final Thoughts
The Almanack of Naval Ravikant is ultimately about clarity.
- Clarity on what wealth really is.
- Clarity on what happiness really requires.
- Clarity on the long game.
At Lifetime, we believe financial success is not measured purely in numbers. Your goals define our success. Real wealth is about having choices, security, and confidence in the future you are building.
This book reinforces that idea beautifully. Build assets. Think long-term. Stay rational. Invest in your specific strengths. And remember that freedom, not status, is the real prize.
It is not about getting rich quickly. It is about becoming someone capable of building lasting wealth and enjoying it.
Would you like to win a copy of The Almanack of Naval Ravikant?
We’re giving one away. Enter the draw for your chance to win this book.
A look back at when the world feared the worst
On August 2, 1990, the world woke up to a grim headline: “Iraq Invades Kuwait; Oil Prices Soar, Markets Plunge.”
Saddam Hussein's forces had crossed into Kuwait, triggering fears of a prolonged conflict in the oil-rich Middle East.
The immediate market reaction was swift and severe.
Lifetime Book Club: The Let Them Theory
In a world where we spend so much energy trying to control outcomes, manage other people’s opinions, and keep everything on track, this book offers a different approach. One that suggests peace comes not from controlling more, but from letting go.

