Quote from ralph00:
Education of a Speculator is a top 5 as well.
Doh! Oh, the memories of that book...
I remember reading Education of a Speculator (Vic Niederhoffer) when it came out and literally thinking, wow: "Here is a massively pretentious guy who WANTS to blow himself up."
The book was like a psychological case study documenting delusions of grandeur (imho). I mean, VN starts off by bragging about how he never wears shoes to the office, never reads books or newspapers less than 100 years old, plays classical concertos during the trading day, on and on... in otherwords "Look at how much more refined and sensitive and cultured I am than you."
The book itself was very entertaining -- ruminations on squash, lobagola analysis, hoodoos, stuff like that -- but the guy practically advertised a trading death wish.
In that story of trading the yen, where his accounts were just a few ticks away from total annihilation, you can just sense VN's death lust oozing off the pages. The guy was perversely proud of juggling hand grenades, and facets of his ego came off every page.
When I finished the book I wrote an Amazon review, stating "this guy wants to blow himself up" (among other critiques). Vic got Amazon to take the review down somehow. But then sure enough, not long after... and not long after that yet again...
Now contrast a guy like Vic -- who shouts LOOK AT ME, LOOK AT ME -- with a book like "Soros on Soros," where the palindrome goes on at great length about how humble the market has made him, how his whole philosophy is based on the concept of fallibility, the reality of imperfect information etc. etc. etc. It's night and day.
(Soros also told Vic he was going to blow up someday. Vic bragged about the anecdote in E of a S. Then he did blow up. And then once or twice more for good measure.)
p.s. Ironically, if MartinGhoul had said the only trading book he'd consumed in the past 20 years was VN's, I would instantly understand the base case for his point of view...