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Memory Palace: How To Remember Everything You Learn; A Guide To Learning With Unlimited Potential

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Today only, get this bestseller for a special price. As you know, forgetting things can be really frustrating and embarrassing. Imagine forgetting the birthday of your loved ones or your own wedding anniversary. What would happen if you forgot that your kid has a sports game or a play at school and you already promised to attend? Your kid would not be happy with you. No matter how much stored information you are unable to retrieve, this book is sure to change all your frustrations and change your life forever. Imagine being able to remember anything you see, hear, smell, feel, and taste. Imagine the ability to keep the memories you don’t wish to remember, perhaps because they are too embarrassing, traumatic or depressing and the ability to easily retrieve the happy events that have been stored in your memory. This book is a sure bet to do all that! Get your copy today! Take action today and buy this book now at a special price!

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Published February 8, 2018

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Adam Brown

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Joel Watson.
4 reviews
May 7, 2018
Terrible sentence construction and an apparently poor grasp of grammar make this a nearly unusable text.
Profile Image for Sean.
240 reviews2 followers
January 31, 2021
As you get older, the talk of 'senior moments' is a regular subject of many conversations. I am pleased to say I have not seen a deterioation in my memory. If anything, my memory has improved. On one hand, this is a result of having a greater understanding of how the brain works. On the other hand, I have worked at it and use many memory techniques and principles. This is not to say I am satisfied with my ability to retain information; there is clearly room for improvement. Therefore, memory palaces - age old principles that go back 2000+ years - are an important tool which could make a massive difference. The author makes a distinction between short term and long term memory. The basic principle is that repeating information makes recall easier. The first step is to imagine a palace and create a route of locations aroud the palace. The second step is determining what you remember. The third step is to summarise and simplify. This is not the best book on memory palaces but it is a helpful addition.
Profile Image for Elvis Ozoria.
16 reviews3 followers
October 3, 2020
This is my personal experience so other readers will probably have a different one, if you have 45-60 minutes that you don't know what to do with, feel free to read.

This book accomplished what none other had before: giving me the opportunity to learn absolutely nothing new, at least nothing about hot o remember everything I learn. 70% of the thing is about the structure of the brain, 25% of things are repetitive examples of the same points, over and over again, 5% talks about the concept of a memory palace, foods that help memory, and so on.

This feels like either a blog post that has been inflated to be an ebook or a last minute school assignment. But hey, I don't have an ebook of my own so... who am I to judge right?

Profile Image for Jay Best.
298 reviews4 followers
November 2, 2022
At first, I didn't know why there was lower ratings on this audiobook.

Its a good summary of memory tools and systems, but then there were audio production issues and esp the second half of the book, it seemed to be filler, and just summarising the key things you do for memory, but without explaining what they are. At times it felt like the content you find when a student is rushing their assignment.

Note that at 27 minutes in, the audio is poorly edited and has what sounds like a burp or big gulp.

Listened at 2x via Libby
Profile Image for Helfren.
955 reviews10 followers
August 7, 2020
This book is rich on the information of the brain and the theory of how we form memories either long term or the short term. However, the content is misleading as it is not about how to remember everything with memory palace but more on the practical knowledge of biology of brain.
Profile Image for neeza  zainal.
164 reviews7 followers
November 15, 2018
This book doesn't teach you how to memorise things well rather than explaining how the brain function in order for us to utilise it. I really like what I've listened.
Profile Image for Mezzie.
151 reviews
April 22, 2019
I was interested in the topic, but the writing is so bad that it’s unreadable.
Profile Image for Carmen Roman.
3 reviews
December 24, 2022
A very quick summary of memory categories and mnemonic tools. Barely mentions memory palace as a tool. The book is not worth the time.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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