The market for crypto trading books is mostly noise: cash-grab pamphlets, generic “10 ways to get rich” pages, and outdated content from the 2017 bull market. Ten books are genuinely worth your time, in two categories: technical/market-structure books, and trader-psychology books. This page lists each with reading order.
Category 1: Technical analysis and market structure
1. “Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets” by John J. Murphy. Not crypto-specific but the foundation text. Candlesticks, trend, momentum indicators, classical patterns. Read first.
2. “Trading in the Zone” by Mark Douglas. Psychology of trading. Probably the most-recommended book by professional retail traders. Not a strategy book; a mindset book. Read second.
3. “Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns” by Thomas Bulkowski. Reference for chart pattern statistics. Win rates, average gains/losses per pattern. Less narrative, more lookup-table.
4. “Market Wizards” series by Jack Schwager. Interviews with successful traders across asset classes. The recurring themes across interviews are the real lessons.
5. “The New Trading for a Living” by Alexander Elder. Classic retail trading education. Covers strategy, psychology, capital management. Forex/equity focus but principles transfer to crypto.
Category 2: Crypto-specific and market structure
6. “The Bitcoin Standard” by Saifedean Ammous. Not a trading book; a Bitcoin fundamentals book. Helps understand what BTC actually is before trading it.
7. “Cryptoassets” by Chris Burniske and Jack Tatar. Framework for valuing crypto assets. Useful for fundamental analysis alongside technical chart reading.
8. “The Internet of Money” by Andreas Antonopoulos. Crypto philosophy and history. Helps understand why crypto exists and what drives long-term thesis.
Category 3: Risk and psychology
9. “Antifragile” by Nassim Taleb. Risk management thinking from the macro level down. Particularly useful for tail-risk thinking in crypto markets.
10. “Thinking, Fast and Slow” by Daniel Kahneman. Cognitive biases that affect every trader. Knowing your biases is a precondition for managing them.
Reading order recommendation:
For a complete beginner: 1. “Trading in the Zone”, set the mental framework first 2. “Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets”, build the chart-reading foundation 3. “The Bitcoin Standard”, understand the underlying asset 4. “Cryptoassets”, framework for valuation 5. “Market Wizards”, learn how successful traders actually think 6. “The New Trading for a Living”, bring it together as a system 7. “Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns”, reference for the long term
For an experienced traditional trader entering crypto: 1. “The Bitcoin Standard”, fast onboarding to the asset class 2. “Cryptoassets”, fundamental framework 3. “The Internet of Money”, context
For traders struggling with psychology: 1. “Thinking, Fast and Slow”, cognitive biases 2. “Trading in the Zone”, applied trading psychology 3. “Antifragile”, risk thinking
Books worth skipping:
The “10 ways to get rich quick with crypto” category is mostly noise. Specifically avoid: books promising guaranteed returns; books published in 2017-2018 bull market without subsequent updates; books that are primarily about the author’s biography rather than transferable skills; books that promote specific tokens (often paid promotions).
Free alternatives to books:
- Trading View public scripts and ideas: free, community-curated
- BabyPips.com School of Pipsology: complete free forex course; principles transfer to crypto
- Volity’s own /education/ section: built-in learning materials
- YouTube channels run by traders who post their actual P&L
Books are not the only path. They are a depth-of-thought medium that other formats sometimes lack.
How to read trading books effectively:
- Read with a journal next to you
- Note one concrete habit per chapter that you will apply
- Apply it on demo for 2-4 weeks before adding more
- Review after 1-3 months: which habits stuck, which did not
A book read passively produces nothing. A book applied chapter by chapter produces lasting changes in trading behaviour.
Where Volity’s platform fits with book learning:
- Demo account: practise book concepts without capital risk
- Charting on Volity MT: apply chart patterns from the books
- Trading journal export: build the data layer for monthly review
- API access: backtest concepts from systems-oriented books
The platform supports the learning loop; the books provide the framework.
Sources
Related Volity crypto guides
- Benefits of Crypto Trading: 7 Real Advantages
- Crypto Trading Meaning: What It Is, 5 Forms
- Crypto Trading Tips: 12 Habits That Separate Profit
- Live Crypto Trading: Real-Time Execution on Volity
- Crypto Trading Volume Explained
- Crypto Day Trading Platform on Volity MT
- Crypto Trading Charts Guide: How to Read Them
- Can You Make Money Trading Crypto?
- Contract for Difference Trading Crypto: How CFDs Work
Frequently asked questions
What is the best crypto trading book?
“Trading in the Zone” by Mark Douglas is the most-recommended single book among professional retail traders. Not crypto-specific but covers the psychology that determines outcomes regardless of asset class.
Are crypto trading books worth reading?
Yes for fundamentals and frameworks. The 10 books above cover technical analysis, market structure, valuation, and psychology. Skip the cash-grab pamphlets promising guaranteed returns.
What should I read before starting crypto trading?
“Trading in the Zone” for mental framework, “Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets” for chart reading, “The Bitcoin Standard” for understanding the asset. Three books = foundation.
Can I learn crypto trading without books?
Yes. Free resources include BabyPips.com, TradingView public ideas, Volity’s /education/ section, and trader YouTube channels. Books offer depth-of-thought; other formats offer breadth and recency.
How long does it take to read a trading book usefully?
Reading time per book: 4-8 hours. Application time per book: 2-4 weeks of demo practice on the habits introduced. Most books are wasted by reading passively; applied reading is the only valuable kind.
Are there crypto-specific trading books I should read?
“The Bitcoin Standard,” “Cryptoassets,” and “The Internet of Money” cover crypto context, valuation, and philosophy. For trading mechanics, traditional trading books (Murphy, Elder, Schwager) apply across asset classes.
What about books on crypto bots or algorithmic trading?
Most retail bot books are outdated within 6 months of publication. For algorithmic trading concepts, “Quantitative Trading” by Ernest Chan is solid but assumes coding background. For practical bot implementation, online documentation and the Volity API docs are more current than any book.





