The Investing Books You Must Read, According to Jason Zweig

My friend Jason Zweig has read more about investing than most people alive today. He published a list of his must-read investing books at the Wall Street Journal this week and you should make sure you’re at least aware of them and adding them to your queue:

I’m often asked, especially as the holiday gift-giving season approaches, which books I recommend for investors.

I haven’t kept exact count, of course, but over the past quarter-century I have surely read (or tried to read) a couple thousand books on investing. Nearly all of them were a tragic waste of good trees. Most weren’t worth reading even a few pages of.

So I feel strongly that the usual article on “best investing books” has way too many entries and ends up suggesting good books you might read, rather than recommending great books you must read.

Here’s a list that I would still be comfortable with decades from now. Every book below has stood the test of time and, I’m confident, will remain useful for generations to come. You will quickly note that some aren’t even about investing. But they all will help teach you how to think more clearly, which is the only way to become a wiser and better investor. I’ve listed them alphabetically by author.

Keep reading:

Best Books for Investors: A Short Shelf (WSJ)

Read Also:

Jason Zweig: Thirty Years of Enlightening Investors (TRB)

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