Quote from SteveH:
I may as well post this here because it's on my mind...
Bob Volman has written a very thoughtful and approachable book on price action trading called "Forex Price Action Scalping". Like me, most people are probably finding out about it as a cross reference on Amazon from one of the new Brooks books.
He trades the EUR/USD Forex pair on a 70 tick chart with a 10 pip initial 1:1 risk/reward basis with the avg stop more like 6 pips over 100's of trades. There's some overlap with what Brooks does without the detailed naming conventions he uses and not so much intensity in his analysis on a per bar and per chart basis.
I wish that this book had been published at the time of Al's first book and had read this one first. It's not dense and yet it's not full of "filler pages" either. For me it hits the right balance of content before moving on to the next setup (7 fully explained setups in all). If I can sit down in one reading session and get through almost 1/3rd of the book without feeling tired and/or confused, that means the writer has grabbed my attention and the pacing is excellent.
If you're new to trading, don't be put off by the trading instrument or the speed of his favorite scalping chart. You can always trade something else and on a slower chart and the basic principles being taught still apply.
I thought it was a pleasant coincidence that Bob also likes a clean candle chart with just a 20 ema on it as Al also prefers. There you go: two independent, highly experienced traders who come to a lot of common conclusions based on their detailed study of price action.
I give Bob the edge for clarity of explanation when he talks about passing on his setups because the context of the trade (i.e., up, down, sideways) isn't quite right. I give Al the edge in putting across the major observations about two-legged pullbacks, measured moves and when to expect them. Brooks is *way* more involved in the bar-by-bar analysis of price action than Volman and you do get some gems coming from such detailed study.
and he has backtested the 7 set-ups? Or are they just dime in a dozen set-ups that you can find everywhere on the web that nobody knows whether they work?