@Dating specialist - "Richest man in Babylon" is more apt for you. I don't think "Think and grow rich" offers you little value in financial planning (though it does offer other things of value) I would recomend Rich Dad Poor Dad - but just as reference or an introduction to financial planning. Take from it what you feel you like. Funnily MSN money (the article which this thread was originally about) is a great place for people who go "duh" at hi-fi financial books, to learn.
And I think before we went into discussing Kiyosaki, someone mentioned that locking in your money till you're 65 is a bad thing. I don't know - most people I know have trouble with access to thier savings. They can't sit still without spending money they have. If you can ignore the little pinch it creates with the monthly (or yearly - then it's a big pinch) withdrawls - and not think about it - it creates a great nest egg. I'm a miser by nature, so it works great for me