I purchased this book based on the customer reviews below. All gave it high marks. The mistake I made was not recognizing that most of the reviewers were already well versed in not only trading, but the language of trading. Furthermore, all of the other editorial reviews and quotes that I found on this book are from people in the business of stocks. This is like asking a Unix coder if a piece of software is "easy to use." They will not be able to give a true answer because they no longer remember what a beginner's mind is.
This actually may be a very, very well written book. The only error may be the incorrect cover and title, saying that it was written for the complete beginner, the complete and utter idiot. That is just not true. Scott Barrie may be the best options trader in the world, he may also be a brilliant writer. Neither of these qualify him to write a beginner's book. It takes extraordinary skills to take a complex topic and describe it so that anyone can understand.
In my 11 years as a futures investor, broker, and author, I have come to discover that leverage is the criminal that makes futures so risky. If Mr.Barrie had spent more time developing that along with some solidly proven money management techniques I would have given him a 5 star rating.
The thing that I think makes the book most valuable are the options strategies. These also work very well with stocks and some index funds. As the author states these are very limited profit potential, but there is also very little risk. If you guess the market pretty well then there is almost no risk. My favorite of these is also the most basic the straddle option. Here you can make money if prices go up on down, but not if they remain fairly consistent. You typically purchase and at the money call ( right to buy) option and an at the money put option ( right to sell)the only risk involved is the money that is initially paid for the option. Both are purchase at roughly the same strike price so if a price swing up or down will net the option holder some money. Their are other strategies such as the bear put spread, and bull call spread as well as married options were you are actually buying futures. I personally do not like the three becasue all involve selling an options contract which theoretically can have unlimited loss potential. Unless you are very experienced and have a good track record stay away from them.
In conclusion options and futures are very risky intruments. I would advise simply playing the stocks and funds, but if you like this market i would advise buying optiosn, the most you risk there is the amount you paid for the options, and there are no margin calls, I persoanlly know someone who was almost driven to bankruptcy becasue he did not know what he was doing and got into the futures market. I must admit though that the futures market intrests me more than and other area of finance and investing.