Looking over that list. I would omit a bunch of them:
The Art and Science of Technical Analysis by Adam Grimes - just another vendor who webinar advertised on futures.io
Candlestick Course by Steve Nison - there are simpler summaries of commonly effective candlestick patterns
Understanding Price Action by Bob Volman - I remembered someone who tried out this guy's forex book and did a whole bunch of analysis and trials. No edge to the setups, waste of time and just another book author.
Elliot Wave Principle by Frost and Prechter - far simpler summaries out there. Also "wave" 4 and 5 rarely pan out in today's market imo. Optionetics & "Advanced Get" software supposedly signaled wave 5 moves. Waste of time today, imo. Peruse basic fibs and harmonic trading ideas instead.
Mastering the Trade by John F. Carter - options education vendor. I had this book. Just verbiage and waste of time. His room was also an upsell of courses and dvd's and affiliate host vendors would stand in often. (Borodin)
Secrets for Profiting in Bull and Bear Markets by Stan Weinstein - I tried this book. All it basically is "5 phases" of a stock's rise to plateau, then fall using a 50 wma. No edge. Could have been a 1 page summary of the idea, so waste of time.
Complete Guide to Volume Price Analysis by Anna Coulling - Contradictory as it goes along. Not convinced author even really trades. so waste of time imo.
Street Smarts by Linda Raschke - I noticed this wasn't on the first post, but mentioned later on. I tried the ideas on it years ago which were a bunch of stochastic, rsi , adr ideas she and Conners don't even use anymore or anyone else for that matter. Waste of time and simple indicator focus trap to newbs. I think she got famous during the earlier trading eras, before vendors and gurus were more scrutinized or exposed. (see
www.tradingschools.org)
Good books mentioned in the list which could be prioritized:
Trading for a Living by Alexander Elder - Not a strategy book mainly, but good intro to trading in general
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns by Thomas Bulkowski - I think this is a better intro to beginning chart reading than most other books I've seen.
Most of the other books I hadn't heard of or the titles sound too generic and fishy. Like, I've heard of that Darvos book, but it sounds like one of those old gimmick book authors like Kevin Trudeau or pop psych. Anthony Robbins.