What Books I Recommend

Eric had a request on our Request an Article form. Title: What Books would you guys recommend?

Greetings CHARISMNA ARTS,

I have ALWAYS wanted to IMPROVE my over all Game ( as if i HAVE ANY THATS EXISTING,..ha ha). What specific books , articles should I reaD? Any courses that I should take that may help me? Such as NLP, Hypnosis, Salsa, etc.

Thanks for the request Eric. Those are good questions and here I am writing an article for you. :)

I would stay away from NLP and hypnosis - these, IMO, are more scam than reality. Salsa is great if you enjoy dancing. But don’t do it to meet women. There are much more interesting skills to learn if you want to stand out or be a more attractive lizard. Try taking a ballet class. Or a Thai cooking class. Learn to walk on a wire. How about portrait painting class? Learn to French Braid. I saw a guy once who could French Braid. He had a line of girls waiting for his services. And they paid him too. What I’m saying is, think out of the box and learn something more unique than a skill you’d pick up in the typical ‘single people’ classes.

As far as books and reading, I’ll recommend a few self-help/non-fiction titles here but in general I’m more of a proponent of fiction. I love the effect compelling fiction has on the mind. Reading fiction builds our imagination-muscles - which are lacking in most people. I also think a good fiction book can teach subtle things about people and conversation.

Reading a good fiction book is akin to spending time with a good conversationalist or a good storyteller. It can influence the way we communicate.

Here are few of my favorite books I recommend to entertain and enhance your personhood:

My Ebook How to Meet and Connect with Women. The principles I outlined five years ago are still true and at the core of what I teach:  the value of commitment, how to be charming in the face of adversity, all sorts of yummy and helpful ideas.

*Your book. Yep, I think that any decent conversationalist or ladies man in training ought to be writing himself to develop his voice and use of language. It doesn’t matter much what genre. Personally I write poetry, fiction and non-fiction and I can tell you that I have relied on the communication skills I have learned from all of them in many other contexts.

Hope that helps Eric.

All the best, Wayne

BTW, I’d love to hear in the comments any books all of you readers here would recommend reading.