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Trading Books and Reviews which helped me, for beginners as well as seasoned traders/investors. Will keep updating as I read more books.
1/n
Technical Analysis for the Rest of Us By Clifford Pistolese

One of the very first book I read on Technical Analysis.
I read this on my first semester before even opening any of my subject books in college. Has exercises at the end of each chapter to make the concepts clear.
2/n
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator By Edwin Lefèvre

This book is exhilarating biography of one of the most famous stock traders of all time – Jesse Livermore. Everything focuses on the markets, and how the narrator interacts with the markets.
3/n
How to Trade in Stocks By Jesse Livermore

Tape Reading. This is a must read book for any trader attempting to make it big. After reading the book, you realize it wasn& #39;t luck that was on Livermore& #39;s side but his self-discipline to be a better trader.
4/n
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds By Charles Mackay

Bubbles– How they are created and how they burst. The chapters on Tulip mania or The South Sea Bubble will remind the ignorant that nothing has changed in 400 years except the name of the swindle.
5/n
Confusion de Confusiones [1688]: Portions Descriptive of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange By José de la Vega

An entertaining and surprisingly modern account of the Dutch East Indian Company and the Amsterdam stock exchange in their heyday.
6/n
Market Wizards By Jack D. Schwager

What do Bruce Kovner, Paul Tudor Jones and Jim Rogers have in common?

Imagine top investors explaining what they do!
Read all the books by the author and then re-read them every month or two. A must read for any trader/investor.
7/n

Trader Vic-Methods of a Wall Street Master By Victor Sperandeo

Vic is a directional trader-he plays the short side as well as the long side without real preference between the two. This series has two books, helpful to read them both.
8/n
The Inner Voice of Trading By Michael Martin

One of the best books on market psychology read and re-read. My father& #39;s recommendation to me. His favorite trader was Ed Seykota.
9/n
Speculation As a Fine Art and Thoughts on Life By Dickson G. Watts

If you are looking for a trading system to make you millions this is not your book. If you are looking for a classic book with ageless advice, give it a read.
10/n
Swing Trading By Marc Rivalland

A good introduction to swing trading using OHLC charts, moving averages and chart patterns.
11/n
How Markets Fail By John Cassidy

Well researched and historical describing how our free market economic policies have lead us through generations of bubbles, crisis, and other financial crisis
Read this to understand market structure.
12/n
Profit In The Futures Markets! by Jake Bernstein

Jake Bernstein fills his pages with abundant cautions, caveats and confessions.Futures trading is not an investment; it is high-risk speculation. Each strategy requires substantial time and money.
13/n
The Mind of the Market By Michael Shermer

This is a lively, entertaining, useful and uneven work. Readers with knowledge of behavioral economics or negotiation will find some familiar material in this book.
14/n
Trading in the Zone By Mark Douglas

The author repeats himself.
And yet, for traders, I think this book is invaluable. Most could benefit from reading it again and again.
15/n
Trading for a Living By Alexander Elder

Not a book for beginners. However, it& #39;s a book that beginners should read. You will learn that it is all about hard work, and that the folks who sell you systems are selling you fool& #39;s gold.
16/n
Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits and Other Writings By Philip A. Fisher

When I first discovered my interest in investing, Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits is one of the first books I read. Fisher& #39;s approach requires common sense and conviction, but repeatable.
17/n
How To Make Money Trading Derivatives By @AshwaniGujral6

Useful in the context of the Indian Stock market though the book is a little dated (it was last updated in 2006) and therefore is based mostly on historical price movements and strategies.
18/n
How I Made $2,000,000 In The Stock Market By Nicolas Darvas

I enjoyed the story and I wasn& #39;t expecting anything too technical and that& #39;s exactly what I got. This was a tale of a not so sophisticated investing who created a basic system to help him invest his money to 2mil.
19/n
One Up On Wall Street By Peter Lynch

A very helpful book for those who want to gain some basic knowledge about how stocks work in the financial market and how to select the best portfolio of securities.
20/n
Winning the Loser& #39;s Game By Charles D. Ellis

I didn& #39;t particularly enjoy it, I would recommend it for the average person who has a retirement account and needs to learn some basics.
21/n
The Disciplined Trader: Developing Winning Attitudes By Mark Douglas

Great book, and fascinating descriptions of the nature of thoughts, beliefs, emotional energy, etc. Certainly, it& #39;s helping me become more aware of my emotions in the markets.
22/n
Irrational Exuberance By Robert J. Shiller

Stock market, bond market and real estate market. When, where and why in a bubble? What is psychology& #39;s role into the markets? with historical case studies and comparison studies of trends of different markets.
23/n
The Greatest Trade Ever By Gregory Zuckerman

The Greatest Trade Ever is very well written and easy to follow book which describes the trades of John Paulson, Michael Burry and a few others who could see that the housing market was a time bomb, just waiting to explode.
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