I only bought it because his first book had been such a block-buster and been so significant in developing my trading career. Obviously someone who SHOULD have been a one-book wonder.Splitlink said:Is that the title? Not, exactly, the essence of brevity, is he?TheBramble - who chucked this book out said:"Por que os pescadores de caranguejo perdem as camisas deles em reversões afiadas" Emillio Stundabaras
Split
rols said:The Guts and Glory of Day Trading: True Stories of Day Traders Who Made (or Lost) $1,000,000
This is a classic! Got given it for Xmas a few years ago....Ho Ho Ho!
Trendietrendie said:I have always had a problem with throwing away books.
The only books I actually burned were my exercise books after completing school. ( made a bonfire )
I tend to give books away rather than destroy them.
Even if I find a particular trading book useless, I still keep it for the sake of curiosity, as a reminder of the kinds of books I should avoid in future.
My books, ( and I suspect most of us ) are a representation of our personal development over the years. When I look back at the kinds of books I read, and thought interesting all those years ago, it is a microcosm of how we have developed and matured over the years, in our habits, and interests, and also how our ideas have altered over the years.
I like my books, good ones, bad ones, embarrassing ones, and all.
I would keep them all. ( although some I may hide behind vases )
Trendie
Despite my earlier posting when I said most trading books are not worth the money, my "throwing out" would be metaphorical rather than actual. I too share your attitude about books and hold a respect for them. Your post served to remind me of that.
I have, in fact, never thrown away a book, but always prefer to pass them on to charity. Even that event is rare.
You can indeed learn from bad books and bad teachers if you have an open mind. You learn what not to do.
So perhaps I should retract my earlier posting.
Thank you
Charlton
Mein Kampf
- the book that resulted in tens of millions dying.
hmm....you could say the same thing about Mao's little red book (Mao's Great Leap Forward), or "The Communist Manifesto" (famines in Soviet Russia in the 1930s; you could also add the Soviet deaths in WWII since Communism was Hitler's other bete noir as well as (if not more than) Judaism.
If we want to try to understand how an apparently civilised country like 1920s-1930s Germany could allow someone like Hitler to come to power, it probably behoves us to try to read it (I gather that it's pretty unreadable actually).
Men Only. Too many pages are stuck together.
UTB