The problem today is too much information, not too little.
Your goal is to glean through all of this material, irrelevant facts, and downright cancerous baloney, and: 1) Get the data you need (easy), and 2) Get your head straight (almost impossible when surrounded with a million screaming poop throwing monkeys who don't know what the heck they are talking about).
There are a lot of dangers along the way that ensure you are not going to win at this game, one of them is spreading your attention everywhere. I am guilty of getting on the internet and doing the squirrel thing, scurrying all around and getting nothing done. Books force you to focus your attention on one thing.
I'm a little surprised that someone so new to trading seems to think reading 10-20 books is too much work, or a waste of time. I've read over 300 books on trading and related topics, and I agree it's diminishing returns, but they do give you new ideas. Rather than accepting this as a criticism, maybe you should feel complimented, because you figured out the correlations between the people who just break even. The more you read, the more you realize that everybody is DOING, not THINKING, but DOING the same things, and everybody is therefore getting the same results. Even if you are a Nobel Lauriat with a size 9 hat, if you enter with Joe six pack, his ORDER FLOW, and people like him ensure you are going to get the same results.
Look, this isn't a criticism. But I'm not sure you understand what it takes to make money and hold onto it. This is going to be a multi thousand hour slog. You are right about books, diminishing return. If you really want to learn, read and download every interview of traders you can find and look for correlations between what the winners and losers say, because believe me, it's all there for anyone who wants to flush what he thinks and learn what needs to be done.