This isn't in any particular order.
Read:
The Intelligent Investor (1973) - Warren Buffett
Crippled America, How to Make America Great Again - Donald Trump
The Lean Startup - Eric Ries
What Every Real Estate Investor Needs to Know About Cash Flow - Frank Gallinelli
How to Win Friends and Influence People - Dale Carnegie
Singapore Success, Engineering Economic Growth - Henri Ghesquiere
Secrets of Closing the Sale - Zig Ziglar
The Road to Serfdom - Friedrich Hayek
Dear Reader The Unauthorized Autobiography of Kim Jong Il - Michael Malice
Smart Calling, Eliminate the Fear, Failure and Rejection from Cold Calling - Art Sobczak
The Book on Investing Investing in Real Estate with No Money Down - Brandon Turner
The Complete Guide to Buying and Selling Apartment Buildings Second Edition - Steve Berges
Cashflow Quadrant Rich Dad's Guide to Financial Freedom - Robert Kiyosaki
Insider Secrets to Financing your Real Estate Investments - Frankk Gallinelli
The Luxury Strategy Break the Rules of Marketing to Build Luxury Brands - J. N. Kapferer
Ogilvy on Advertising - David Ogilvy
Cold Calling Techniques that Really Work - Stephan Schiffman
Sell or be Sold: How to Get Your Way in Business And in Life - Grant Cardone
The 10x Rule - Grant Cardone
Be Obsessed or Be Average - Grant Cardone
These aren't all the books I've read, I'm pretty sure. There was more, but that was on my tablet which I formatted.
Most of these books have been read in the past month. About 6 of these were read earlier in the year, then I stopped. Now I'm trying to read as often as I can.
Wishlist:
Jones on Property - Bob Jones
My Property World - Bob Jones
The New Zealand Economy: A Personal View - Robert Muldoon
Unfinished Business - Roger Douglas
If you have any suggestions what I should read, please tell me.
You seem to have a business/real estate/investing theme. I'd suggest The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing. It advocates a more simplistic approach to investing that is about making you money, not your financial adviser through his fees/commissions. Even if it doesn't become your core investing strategy, it will help clarify that most of what Wall St is selling is products to make themselves rich, not you.
Most of the books I've read this year have been quite lengthy (especially the Churchill bios), but I've been enjoying everything I've read:
Currently reading:
I'm going to dive into some early American colonial history next, but I am also looking for suggestions on what Greek classics to dive into now that I've finished the Iliad and Odyssey.