A lot of trading books are filled with fluff and aren’t written by profitable traders. So I take everything I read with a grain of salt.
Exactly my experience and attitude, too.
I'm
really difficult to teach, though: I tend to accept only what I've independently examined and verified (which has both advantages and some disadvantages).
I forget the name one of the best books was I read on PA seemed very elementary almost insulting elementary but into it I was like this is actually so elementary it’s so understandable. Lol.
I think I "hear you", there, even without your specifying the book.
I'm not sure I have a "favouite trading book".
Michael Shermer's books have probably (indirectly) helped me most, in "learning what and how to learn".
Al Brooks' trilogy of textbooks has (directly) helped me most in making a living, though I found studying them in detail
very time-consuming.
And for what it's worth, if anything, I think Thomas Bulkowski's big
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns is widely underrated, as there's certainly some interesting stuff buried in there.
Just curious what time frame do you trade? And are you using currency futures? or have you opened up to other asset classes as well?
I trade from constant-volume charts, not timed charts.
I trade what I suspect might be a slightly unusual combination of instruments: mostly NQ (Nasdaq futures), CL (oil futures), 6E (Euro futures) and 6B (Pound futures).
I originally traded EUR/USD and Cable, as spot forex, gradually switched to their corresponding futures so as to be able to use volume (which made a significant, positive difference), and from there added NQ and CL, both of which I now prefer, overall.