Books, Books, Books

Originally posted by darkhorse



Hey nitro is it true Paul Tudor Jones wrote the foreword?

Does he say anything noteworthy / interesting?
Dark,

The forward was written by PTJ.

Does he say anything noteworthy? Well, he states the four greatest trading books of all time for the beginning trader:

1) Reminiscences by Lefevre
2) TAST by McGee and Edwards
3) The Elliott Wave Theorist by Pretcher and Forst
4) Market Wizards by Schwager

He says he is adding Fisher's book to that list...

The thing that amazes me [quoting PTJ]

"...Having seen hundreds of traders matriculate through the doors here at Tudor Group, I am constantly amazed that virtually all of them have different ways of approaching and reaping profits from the marketplace..."

nitro
 
Originally posted by nitro


"...Having seen hundreds of traders matriculate through the doors here at Tudor Group, I am constantly amazed that virtually all of them have different ways of approaching and reaping profits from the marketplace..."



cool

yep, many paths up the profit mountain...
 
Quote from nitro:

Dark,

The forward was written by PTJ.

Does he say anything noteworthy? Well, he states the four greatest trading books of all time for the beginning trader:

1) Reminiscences by Lefevre
2) TAST by McGee and Edwards
3) The Elliott Wave Theorist by Pretcher and Forst
4) Market Wizards by Schwager

He says he is adding Fisher's book to that list...

The thing that amazes me [quoting PTJ]

"...Having seen hundreds of traders matriculate through the doors here at Tudor Group, I am constantly amazed that virtually all of them have different ways of approaching and reaping profits from the marketplace..."

nitro

==========================

Number 4;
Jack Schwager top trader books actually consist of 3 books

:cool:

Also worthy of note;
Top trader William O Neill mentions Bernard Baruch favorably.
 
Baruch, I also found the first book to be a very tough read. His second one was as bad ... a really good case for using a ghost writer ... and didnt add very much to the first book.

I did find that the ideas in both books spoke to me as a trader but his prescriptions for overcoming the fears seem less effective than his description of them. Anyone who wanted to look at his ideas first without struggling thru the writing can download the interview for Disciplined Trader by Thom Hartle from the TASC online PDF website

http://store.yahoo.com/traderscom/-v15-c01-markdoup-pdf.html
 
Quote from kiwi_trader:

Baruch, I also found the first book to be a very tough read. His second one was as bad ... a really good case for using a ghost writer ... and didnt add very much to the first book.

I did find that the ideas in both books spoke to me as a trader but his prescriptions for overcoming the fears seem less effective than his description of them. Anyone who wanted to look at his ideas first without struggling thru the writing can download the interview for Disciplined Trader by Thom Hartle from the TASC online PDF website

http://store.yahoo.com/traderscom/-v15-c01-markdoup-pdf.html

I find his first book complete useless. Better read some of the classics.
 
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