I've been concentrating on the Trend Bar on Gap Open and Gap Opentings:Reversals and Continuations.
Page 302.
Wonderful stuff.
Page 302.
Wonderful stuff.
plenty of real chart examples, click on 2007 link http://patterntrading.blogspot.com/Quote from workwithus:
...focus on patterns(triangles,rectangles,wedges,flags and pennants)...g.hth
Quote from IanMacQuaide:
I've been concentrating on the Trend Bar on Gap Open and Gap Opentings:Reversals and Continuations.
Page 302.
Wonderful stuff.
Quote from mxjones:
I am not saying the content of this book is bad, but I am saying the writing is terrible. Al uses 30 words when only 5 are called for, and it needs to be organized in a more coherent manner. He talks about stuff in early chapters that he doesn't explain until later chapters, and it takes a lot of work to figure out WTF.
You would think his publisher would have paired him with a capable editor, but it appears not. You need to spend a lot of time with this book, but not because it is complex or "for seasoned traders"....because it is convoluted and you have to work to figure out the point he is trying to make.
http://tv.ino.com/free/Quote from Swan Noir:
Can anyone suggest a book I can read on candle bars and patterns that is one step less advanced than Al Brooks' book.
Thanks ...
Upload the 10 GB of content so we can check it outQuote from slacker:
http://tv.ino.com/free/
I have about 10 gigs of videos on my iphone and desktop that I watch again and again. There is also a 3 day seminar by Mark Fisher on the web that is great.
Good luck,

Once I've read this book a couple of times, I'm going to try to simplify some of the concepts and post them up here. The ideas he presents are very applicable and valid; they just need to be written using simpler terms.Quote from smilingsynic:
Right--the writing is not great. The organization is even worse.
The explanation of the High 1, Low 1, High 2 concept , etc--just painful.
Quote from mxjones:
I am not saying the content of this book is bad, but I am saying the writing is terrible. Al uses 30 words when only 5 are called for, and it needs to be organized in a more coherent manner. He talks about stuff in early chapters that he doesn't explain until later chapters, and it takes a lot of work to figure out WTF.
You would think his publisher would have paired him with a capable editor, but it appears not. You need to spend a lot of time with this book, but not because it is complex or "for seasoned traders"....because it is convoluted and you have to work to figure out the point he is trying to make.