Should we update Book section?

I thought maybe the Books section could use some updating and refining. Perhaps we can also add some new categories such as Economics, Quantitative Finance and Investing... even though ET is a trading site? Here is a partial list of books that I would recommend that I didn't see (may have missed them) in the Books section:

Psychology:
Trading in the Zone by Mark Douglas

Classics:
When Genius Failed by Roger Lowenstein
Moneyball by Michael Lewis
Liar's Poker by Michael Lewis
Barbarians at the Gate
Ugly Americans: The True Story of the Ivy League Cowboys Who Raided the Asian Markets for Millions by Ben Mezrich
Every Man A Speculator by Steve Fraser

Theoretical:
Alchemy of Finance by George Soros
The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
A Nasdaq Market Simulation by Vincent Darley

Investing:
One Up on Wall Street by Peter Lynch
The Essays of Warren Buffet by Buffet & Lawrence A. Cunningham
Security Analysis by Benjamin Graham

Trading:
Steidlmayer on Markets by Peter Steidlmayer (first half is good until he starts selling product).
The Art of the Trade: What I Learned (and Lost) Trading the Chicago Futures Markets by Jason Alan Jankovsky

Quantitative:
Frequently Asked Questions in Quantitative Finance by Paul Wilmott
(Any other Wilmott and Fabozzi books)
All About Hedge Funds by Robert Jaegar

Economics:
Freakonomics by Steven Levitt
The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman


Thoughts? Recommend any of other books... there are certainly a lot others.
 
perhaps we can also prune some of the books that are long term with no or few reviews. Obviously they have not gained traction. It should be a place of books people actually read, not a dump of every trading book ever conceived
 
Quote from monty21:

I thought maybe the Books section could use some updating and refining. Perhaps we can also add some new categories such as Economics, Quantitative Finance and Investing... even though ET is a trading site? Here is a partial list of books that I would recommend that I didn't see (may have missed them) in the Books section:

Psychology:
Trading in the Zone by Mark Douglas

Classics:
When Genius Failed by Roger Lowenstein
Moneyball by Michael Lewis
Liar's Poker by Michael Lewis
Barbarians at the Gate
Ugly Americans: The True Story of the Ivy League Cowboys Who Raided the Asian Markets for Millions by Ben Mezrich
Every Man A Speculator by Steve Fraser

Theoretical:
Alchemy of Finance by George Soros
The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
A Nasdaq Market Simulation by Vincent Darley

Investing:
One Up on Wall Street by Peter Lynch
The Essays of Warren Buffet by Buffet & Lawrence A. Cunningham
Security Analysis by Benjamin Graham

Trading:
Steidlmayer on Markets by Peter Steidlmayer (first half is good until he starts selling product).
The Art of the Trade: What I Learned (and Lost) Trading the Chicago Futures Markets by Jason Alan Jankovsky

Quantitative:
Frequently Asked Questions in Quantitative Finance by Paul Wilmott
(Any other Wilmott and Fabozzi books)
All About Hedge Funds by Robert Jaegar

Economics:
Freakonomics by Steven Levitt
The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman


Thoughts? Recommend any of other books... there are certainly a lot others.

i am sure trading in the zone is there
 
Quote from TraderZones:

i am sure trading in the zone is there

Just checked and didn't see any Douglas' books.

My list consists of those I would recommend to others. I have over 5 gigs of trading books in pdf... so I've read a small fraction of them. But there is so much garbage out there. So much repetitive basic information (be disciplined and control your emotions bla bla bla is in every book), many custom-made indicators and even systems (buy when your custom made indicator converges with a 20-day moving average and 9-day RSI is 60 type of bs). It's sad people ever try to copy any strategy from a book published months/years ago.

I personally enjoy the classics most.
 
And how about putting up a poll, rather than a couple of people throw up their lists? It should be based on ET collective knowledge, not a couple of people's ideas.

Thanks for the suggestion to do this Monty, but lets do it right.

Most trading books are a waste of time. ET should house the accepted classics and important books. There are thousands, and most do not belong here.

And how about publicizing this effort on other thread categoriess to get ET involved???
 
Poll sounds like a good idea. I didn't mean that my books should be put up... I was just using that as an example to refresh the Book section... a lot of them are quite popular though.

I don't know exactly how to do this. A poll would constantly have to be updated... it is also limited to x amount of books. Maybe people can add titles to this thread and other members can give a +1 or -1 as a response. That could be difficult to keep track of though. Maybe it would be even simpler to have a book forum (wouldn't show up on front page)? We can each make threads about four books and a poll for each.
 
Quote from monty21:

Poll sounds like a good idea. I didn't mean that my books should be put up... I was just using that as an example to refresh the Book section... a lot of them are quite popular though.

I don't know exactly how to do this. A poll would constantly have to be updated... it is also limited to x amount of books. Maybe people can add titles to this thread and other members can give a +1 or -1 as a response. That could be difficult to keep track of though. Maybe it would be even simpler to have a book forum (wouldn't show up on front page)? We can each make threads about four books and a poll for each.

People can start with nominating some potential books, and poll could follow. But this needs ET publicity, or will be hollow.
 
Quote from TraderZones:

People can start with nominating some potential books, and poll could follow. But this needs ET publicity, or will be hollow.

Yup...

Judging by the lack of posters on this thread... the idea is either not very good and is not catching on OR people are not aware of it in the first place.
 
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