I’m nominating this little masterpiece. (And, no, I’m not the author, nor related to the author, nor have any financial incentive here. I’m just enthusiastic about what I’ve read...) https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07FB2J8X7?storeType=ebooks
No disrespect at all (and no aspersions cast about the book, which I've never seen - it's only just been published last month, apparently), but "free on Kindle" may be rather a sub-optimal criterion by which to assess textbook quality???
Yeah, that's the way it works in life. Free advice is usually the best. (The only free advice I ever got that was any good... "Don't squat on your spurs".)
Are you asking me? If so, the answer is one. Nison's book on candlesticks... minimal value. (I take that back... it's two. The Precter and Frost book on Elliott Wave, also. Wouldn't recommend trying to build an overall strategy around E-Waves...difficult to interpret wave structure effectively and consistently... though there are a few jems. Then again... if in reading a book you glean even ONE solid and useful concept, it's worth it.)
Well I think, books are awesome from one point of view, but at the other, for me, i am a bit busy, book reading is rare for me. I like more book conspects that helps to get to the point much more faster than ordinary reading. I for example a lot of information learned from Stock trading game's learning sections, because the information gets to the point right away.