alright, so i'm getting a few days off work coming up in a month or so, and am looking for some recommendations on technically challenging but immediately useful books in trading -- maybe we could pool ideas & get everyone a list?
i feel like many books in finance/trading could be classified into the dimensions of:
(a) Technically challenging material vs. Non-challenging/easy to read - eg. stuff you could really dig deep like a textbook vs. something like a novel to be flipped over for general ideas
(b) Immediately useful vs. Non-"immediately useful" - eg. immediately useful would be ideas that are well-defined, empirically solid and described in such a way that could be directly applied w/o having to peel back layers of assumptions in toy models
so there would be 4 broad categories and some examples for could be
1. Technically challenging, Immediately useful - Options Futures Other Derivatives (John Hull), Fabozzi textbooks, Natenberg volatility
2. Non-challenging, Immediately useful - Market wizards, Reminiscences, Trading & Exchanges, Graham and Dodd Security Analysis, Most newswires would be here probably
3. Technically challenging, Non-"immediately useful" - a few of those Springer continuous time finance books, lol
4. Non-challenging, Non-"immediately useful" - marketing materials by online gurus, etc
More ideas for category #1 above would be good, gotta get a workout in
i feel like many books in finance/trading could be classified into the dimensions of:
(a) Technically challenging material vs. Non-challenging/easy to read - eg. stuff you could really dig deep like a textbook vs. something like a novel to be flipped over for general ideas
(b) Immediately useful vs. Non-"immediately useful" - eg. immediately useful would be ideas that are well-defined, empirically solid and described in such a way that could be directly applied w/o having to peel back layers of assumptions in toy models
so there would be 4 broad categories and some examples for could be
1. Technically challenging, Immediately useful - Options Futures Other Derivatives (John Hull), Fabozzi textbooks, Natenberg volatility
2. Non-challenging, Immediately useful - Market wizards, Reminiscences, Trading & Exchanges, Graham and Dodd Security Analysis, Most newswires would be here probably
3. Technically challenging, Non-"immediately useful" - a few of those Springer continuous time finance books, lol
4. Non-challenging, Non-"immediately useful" - marketing materials by online gurus, etc
More ideas for category #1 above would be good, gotta get a workout in
