Are you tired of forgetting important information? Do you want to improve your memory and increase your mental power? Look no further than "The Roth Memory Course."
With simple and scientific methods, this book provides brain and memory games that will help you improve your memory for personal, business, or study purposes. This updated 2023 edition, edited by Pat Stephenson, includes all original 1918 illustrations and has been proofread with corrections made to typos. Previously available in just paperback and Kindle editions, it is also now available in hardcover in 2023! The cover features a white background with a red circle containing an illustration of a finger with a string on it.
Author David Roth created this course out of his own desire to improve his memory and now, you can benefit from his expertise. In "The Roth Memory Course," Roth shares his personal account of discovering an easy way to remember. His memory system is effective, natural, and easy to learn. With a little application, you can accomplish feats you never thought possible.
You don't need to be born with an excellent memory to improve it dramatically. This book is for everyone who wants to take control of their memory and increase their mental power. Learn the simple and natural memory system that has helped thousands of people improve their memory and change their lives.
Don't miss out on the opportunity to unlock your mental potential. Order "The Roth Memory Course" today and start improving your memory!
This book helped me get As and Bs in college. Not really. I just said that. I have one of those memories that got me through college this way: I would read the text book, underline it, and the night before the test I would read what I underlined, and then get either an A or a B. A week or two later my memory would fade.
I read this book when I was in the 7th or 8th grade. I know exactly where he was located on the shelf at our library in Paso Robles, CA., but I don’t remember the book very well.
I do believe this was in it: In order to memorize people’s names you had to connect their face to something, like: “This man’s name is Bill,” and then you visualize a one dollar bill in his hand. Then the next time you see him you can remember his name, “Hi Dollar,” you say. I tried this a few years ago when I had joined a group here in Oklahoma. I remembered everyone’s names this way, and then after quitting the group a few months later, whenever I ran into one of them in town, I couldn’t recall their name. It only works if you remain in the group and keep making the associations.
I think this book may have been the one that talked about singing in order to remember things. I realized then how easy it was for me to remember songs, so I spent one day singing my history lesson, and ii worked. It went like this:
Paul Revere road a horse into town, he yelled that the people to get down The British were coming; they were not going, and it all happened in 1642, a day when the sky was blue.
It was something like that. I hated dates, and I have no idea if anything happened worthwhile in 1642. Well, yes there was an English Civil War. I looked it up, and Paul Revere rode in 1775.
I don’t recall anything else about this book, but with a memory like mine you can get through almost any college course, that is, if they don’t give you a freak test two weeks later.