Economics · Similar reads
Books like Unshakeable
Unshakeable by Tony Robbins is about investing, financial freedom, market psychology. If that's what drew you in, here are 6 books that share its DNA — each summarized on Superbook, and ready to chat with in the app.
- Money: Master the Game
01
Tony Robbins · Economics
Money: Master the Game is Tony Robbins's attempt to distill financial wisdom from interviews with fifty of the world's most successful investors — including Ray Dalio, Warren Buffett, Jack Bogle, and Paul Tudor Jones — into a practical guide for ordinary people.
Read the summary → - The Psychology of Money
02
Morgan Housel · Economics
The Psychology of Money is Morgan Housel's argument that financial success depends less on technical knowledge than on behavior — specifically, on understanding how your personal history, emotions, and cognitive biases shape every financial decision you make.
Read the summary → - Thinking in Bets: Making Smarter Decisions When You Don't Have All the Facts
03
Thinking in Bets: Making Smarter Decisions When You Don't Have All the Facts
Annie Duke · Psychology
Thinking in Bets is Annie Duke's argument that most decisions in life share a fundamental feature with poker hands: you're choosing under uncertainty, with incomplete information, and luck will affect the outcome regardless of how well you reasoned.
Read the summary → - The Little Book of Common Sense Investing
04
The Little Book of Common Sense Investing
John C. Bogle · Economics
The Little Book of Common Sense Investing is John Bogle's concise case for why buying the entire stock market through a low-cost index fund is the most rational investment strategy available to most people.
Read the summary → - 100 to 1 in the Stock Market
05
Thomas Phelps · Economics
100 to 1 in the Stock Market, published in 1972 by Thomas Phelps, is a study of the conditions under which stocks return one hundred times an investor's original investment — and an argument that such stocks are more common and more identifiable in advance than most investors believe.
Read the summary → - A Random Walk Down Wall Street
06
A Random Walk Down Wall Street
Burton G. Malkiel · Economics
A Random Walk Down Wall Street is Burton Malkiel's argument that stock prices move in a way that is effectively unpredictable, that professional fund managers cannot consistently beat the market, and that the rational response for most investors is to buy and hold a diversified index fund.
Read the summary →