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Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It Paperback – August 5, 2014
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“A brilliant and thoroughly modern guide to learning new languages.”—Gary Marcus, cognitive psychologist and author of the New York Times bestseller Guitar Zero
At thirty years old, Gabriel Wyner speaks six languages fluently. He didn’t learn them in school—who does? Rather, he learned them in the past few years, working on his own and practicing on the subway, using simple techniques and free online resources—and here he wants to show others what he’s discovered.
Starting with pronunciation, you’ll learn how to rewire your ears and turn foreign sounds into familiar sounds. You’ll retrain your tongue to produce those sounds accurately, using tricks from opera singers and actors. Next, you’ll begin to tackle words, and connect sounds and spellings to imagery rather than translations, which will enable you to think in a foreign language. And with the help of sophisticated spaced-repetition techniques, you’ll be able to memorize hundreds of words a month in minutes every day.
This is brain hacking at its most exciting, taking what we know about neuroscience and linguistics and using it to create the most efficient and enjoyable way to learn a foreign language in the spare minutes of your day.
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarmony
- Publication dateAugust 5, 2014
- Dimensions6.1 x 0.7 x 9.2 inches
- ISBN-100385348118
- ISBN-13978-0385348119
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A brilliant and thoroughly modern guide to learning new languages. Fluent Forever won’t teach you French, or German, or any other language—but it will teach you how to learn whatever language you do want to learn, and to learn it faster, and more efficiently. If you want a new language to stick, start here.”—Gary Marcus, cognitive psychologist and author of the New York Times bestseller Guitar Zero
“Aspiring polyglots of the world, take note: this book will help you pick up any new language in record time. If you’re looking for a practical, brain-friendly, field-tested approach to language learning, search no more: you’ve found your guide.”—Josh Kaufman, bestselling author of The First 20 Hours: How to Learn Anything…Fast!
“Fluent Forever promises a fun, personalized learning regimen that is sure to wire a new tongue into your brain with speed and simplicity. And Wyner’s sharp wit will keep you entertained along the way! I've never been so excited to challenge my mind.”—Karen Schrock Simring, contributing editor at Scientific American Mind magazine
“Fluent Forever is the book I wish I had had during my numerous failed attempts at learning different languages. Wyner’s done all the hard work so that the reader can actually enjoy the process of becoming fluent in a language quickly!”—Nelson Dellis, 2011 and 2012 USA Memory Champion
“This is the book I'd use next time I want to learn a new language. It employs an intelligent mix of the latest methods for learning a language on your own using the web, apps, and voice training tips in an accelerated time frame.”—Kevin Kelly, Senior Maverick for Wired Magazine and author of What Technology Wants
“I know what you're thinking: But learning a new language is soooo hard! The solution? Stop being a whiner and start reading Wyner. This book is a winner! Guaranteed to rewire your brain in as many languages as you’d like.”—Joel Saltzman, author of Shake That Brain!: How to Create Winning Solutions and Have Fun While You’re at It
“Mash up the DNA of Steve Jobs and Aristotle, add training in engineering and opera, and you get Gabriel Wyner, whose ingeniously elegant system helps us knuckleheads learn not just foreign languages but, well, everything. Autodidacts rejoice!”—Jay Heinrichs, author of Thank You for Arguing and Word Hero
“Americans refuse to realize that all languages are foreign—yes, including English. It’s time we learned how to speak like the rest of the world: in more ways than one. This book is a hilarious toolbox that helps you get a head start.”—Ilan Stavans, author of Dictionary Days: A Defining Passion
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction: Stab, Stab, Stab
If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his language, that goes to his heart. —Nelson Mandela
Americans who travel abroad for the first time are often shocked to discover that, despite all the progress that has been made in the last 30 years, many foreign people still speak in foreign languages. —Dave Barry
Language learning is a sport. I say this as someone who is in no way qualified to speak about sports; I joined the fencing team in high school in order to get out of gym class. Still, stabbing friends with pointy metal objects resembles language learning more than you might think. Your goal in fencing is to stab people automatically. You spend time learning the names of the weapons and the rules of the game, and you drill the proper posture, every parry, riposte, and lunge. Finally, you play the game, hoping to reach that magical moment when you forget about the rules: Your arm moves of its own accord, you deftly parry your friend’s sword, and you stab him squarely in the chest. Point!
We want to walk up to someone, open our mouths, forget the rules, and speak automatically. This goal can seem out of reach because languages seem hard, but they’re not. There is no such thing as a “hard” language; any idiot can speak whatever language his parents spoke when he was a child. The real challenge lies in finding a path that conforms to the demands of a busy life.
In the midst of my own busy life as an opera singer, I needed to learn German, Italian, French, and Russian. Out of those experiences, I found the underpinnings for this book. My methods are the results of an obsessive need to tinker, research, and tinker again. My language-learning toolbox has, over time, turned into a well-oiled machine that transforms fixed amounts of daily time into noticeable, continuous improvement in my languages and in the languages of every person I’ve taught. In sharing it, I hope to enable you to visit the peculiar world of language learning. In the process, you’ll better understand the inner workings of your mind and the minds of others. You’ll learn to speak a new language, too.
Beginnings
So far, my favorite moment of this crazy language-learning adventure took place in a Viennese subway station in 2012. I was returning home from a show when I saw a Russian colleague coming toward me. Our common language had always been German, and so, in that language, we greeted and caught up on the events of the past year. Then I dropped the bomb. “You know, I speak Russian now,” I told her in Russian.
The expression on her face was priceless. Her jaw actually dropped, like in the cartoons. She stammered, “What? When? How?” as we launched into a long conversation in Russian about language learning, life, and the intersection between the two.
My first attempts to learn languages were significantly less jaw dropping. I went to Hebrew school for seven years. We sang songs, learned the alphabet, lit lots of candles, drank lots of grape juice, and didn’t learn much of anything. Well, except the alphabet; I had that alphabet nailed.
In high school, I fell in love with my Russian teacher, Mrs. Nowakowsky. She was smart and pretty, she had a wacky Russian last name, and I did whatever she asked, whenever she asked. Five years later, I had learned a few phrases, memorized a few poems, and learned that alphabet quite well, thank you very much. By the end of it, I got the impression that something was seriously wrong. Why can I only remember alphabets? Why was everything else so hard?
Fast-forward to June of 2004, at the start of a German immersion program for opera singers in Vermont. At the time, I was an engineer with an oversized singing habit. This habit demanded that I learn basic German, French, and Italian, and I decided that jumping into the pool was the only way I’d ever succeed. Upon my arrival, I was to sign a paper pledging to use German as my only form of communication for seven weeks, under threat of expulsion without refund. At the time, this seemed unwise, as I didn’t speak a word of German. I signed it anyway. Afterward, some advanced students approached me, smiled, and said, “Hallo.” I stared at them blankly for a moment and replied, “Hallo.” We shook hands.
Five insane weeks later, I sang my heart out in a German acting class, found a remote location on campus, and stealthily called my girlfriend. “I think I’m going to be an opera singer,” I told her in whispered English. On that day, I decided to become fluent in the languages demanded by my new profession. I went back to Middlebury College in Vermont and took German again. This time, I reached fluency. I moved to Austria for my master’s studies. While living in Europe in 2008, I went to Perugia, Italy, to learn Italian. Two years later, I became a cheater.
Cheaters Occasionally Prosper: The Three Keys to Language Learning
This book would not exist if I had not cheated on a French test. I’m not proud of it, but there it is. First, some background. The Middlebury Language Schools offer five levels of classes: absolute beginner, “false” beginner (people who have forgotten what they’ve learned), intermediate, advanced, and near fluent. At the time of the test, I was an absolute beginner in French, but I had already learned a Romance language, and I wanted to be with the “false” beginners. So, for my third stint at Middlebury, I cheated on the online placement test, using Google Translate and some grammar websites. Don’t tell Middlebury.
A month later, I received my regrettable results. “Welcome and congratulations!” it began. “You have been placed in the intermediate level!” Shit. I had three months to learn a year’s worth of French or look like an idiot at the entrance interview. These interviews are serious business. You sit in a room with a real, live French person, you chat for fifteen minutes about life, and you leave with a final class placement. You can’t cheat; you can either speak French or make sad faces and wave your hands around like a second-rate Parisian mime.
As I was in the middle of completing master’s degrees in opera and art song, the only free time I had was an hour on the subway every day and all day on Sundays. I frantically turned to the Internet to figure out how to learn a language faster. What I found was surprising: there are a number of incredibly powerful language-learning tools out there, but no single program put all of the new methods together.
I encountered three basic keys to language learning:
1.Learn pronunciation first.
2.Don’t translate.
3.Use spaced repetition systems.
The first key, learn pronunciation first, came out of my music conservatory training (and is widely used by the military and the missionaries of the Mormon church). Singers learn the pronunciation of languages first because we need to sing in these languages long before we have the time to learn them. In the course of mastering the sounds of a language, our ears become attuned to those sounds, making vocabulary acquisition, listening comprehension, and speaking come much more quickly. While we’re at it, we pick up a snazzy, accurate accent.
The second key, don’t translate, was hidden within my experiences at the Middlebury Language Schools in Vermont. Not only can a beginning student skip translating, but it was an essential step in learning how to think in a foreign language. It made language learning possible. This was the fatal flaw in my earlier attempts to learn Hebrew and Russian: I was practicing translation instead of speaking. By throwing away English, I could spend my time building fluency instead of decoding sentences word by word.
The third key, use spaced repetition systems (SRSs), came from language blogs and software developers. SRSs are flash cards on steroids. Based upon your input, they create a custom study plan that drives information deep into your long-term memory. They supercharge memorization, and they have yet to reach mainstream use.
A growing number of language learners on the Internet were taking advantage of SRSs, but they were using them to memorize translations. Conversely, no-translation proponents like Middlebury and Berlitz were using comparatively antiquated study methods, failing to take advantage of the new computerized learning tools. Meanwhile, nobody but the classical singers and the Mormons seemed to care much about pronunciation.
Product details
- Publisher : Harmony (August 5, 2014)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0385348118
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385348119
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.1 x 0.7 x 9.2 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #382,779 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #350 in Memory Improvement Self-Help
- #1,393 in Communication & Social Skills (Books)
- #1,946 in Foreign Language Reference
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Gabriel Wyner is an author, opera singer and polyglot based in Los Angeles, CA. After not getting anywhere in 5 years of high school language classes, he reached fluency in German in 14 weeks with the help of the immersive Middlebury Language Schools. As a result, he fell in love with the process of language learning, going on to spend two months in intensive Italian courses in Perugia, Italy. Searching for ways to bring the immersion experience into the home, he began to develop a system that rapidly builds fluency in short, daily sessions. In 2010, his efforts paid off. He learned French to fluency in 5 months, and then Russian in 10 months.
Born in Los Angeles, Gabriel graduated summa cum laude in 2007 from the University of Southern California with dual degrees in Mechanical Engineering and Vocal Arts Performance, and was awarded the Renaissance Scholar’s prize for excellence in unrelated disciplines. He then moved to Vienna to pursue triple Master’s degrees at the Konservatorium Wien in Opera, Lieder and Voice, and graduated with honors in 2011.
Currently learning Japanese, Gabe learned Hungarian and Spanish between 2013-2017. His book on language learning – Fluent Forever: How to learn a language fast and never forget it – was released in 2014 and became a WSJ and USA Today national bestseller. In 2017, he launched the most successful crowdfunding campaign for an app in history, raising more than $1.7 million dollars to create The Fluent Forever App. It is currently in public beta testing here: Fluent-Forever.app.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this language learning book extraordinarily powerful for building vocabulary and appreciate its concisely written content that makes perfect sense. They praise its effectiveness, with one customer noting how it works with how our brains function, and they particularly value the techniques for creating flashcards and the nearly flawless pronunciation guidance. The book receives positive feedback for its humor and value for money, while opinions on ease of use are mixed, with some finding it simple to apply while others find it tedious.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers appreciate the book's language learning approach, particularly its extraordinarily powerful method for building vocabulary and confirming learning principles. They find the technique and sequence of activities doable.
"...His emphasis on using spaced repetition and building a personal connection to vocabulary makes the process engaging and efficient...." Read more
"Added to my collection. Easy read with great info." Read more
"This is a good find for anyone serious about language learning...." Read more
"...Lots of practical advice, but not just random thought of what worked for the author. What really works to learn a new language?..." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read, with a personable writing style that makes perfect sense.
"...His emphasis on using spaced repetition and building a personal connection to vocabulary makes the process engaging and efficient...." Read more
"Added to my collection. Easy read with great info." Read more
"...jumps from the science behind memory, to bits and pieces of a Spaced Repetition System, to pronunciation, then directs the reader to five appendices..." Read more
"...So overall, I give this book four stars. Three because it is highly readable, an additional fourth because it has lots of sound and practical advice..." Read more
Customers find the book well worth the money.
"...The book is really a good buy for the money...." Read more
"...In short, it's worth every penny. Other reviews detail what the book is made up of, so for brevity I won't include a detailed list...." Read more
"...They're very good value and will speed you up, which makes your study more rewarding and fun...." Read more
"...Other than that this is a cheap and easy way to painlessly get to where you are ready to enter immersion or start trying to talk with others in your..." Read more
Customers find the book extremely effective, with one customer noting that the techniques align with how our brains function.
"...Wyner's system is clear, effective, and fun, and he allows for enough flexibility to advance based on what interests you -- both by topic and by..." Read more
"...This system works. BUY THE BOOK! I also purchased Rosetta Stone at quite some cost I might add...." Read more
"...information for learning a language using some of the most effective methods. Clear, concise, easy to read & with direct application...." Read more
"...repetition techniques as he does, although I do agree they are extremely effective...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's pronunciation guidance, noting that the language sounds are nearly flawless, and one customer mentions mastering back and front vowels.
"...The icing on the cake is the emphasis on auditory and pronunciation training...." Read more
"...memory, to bits and pieces of a Spaced Repetition System, to pronunciation, then directs the reader to five appendices with two variations on..." Read more
"...It was a great product. You learn the sounds of the language, hiragana, and katakana effectively and in a fun way...." Read more
"...because it is highly readable, an additional fourth because it has lots of sound and practical advice and materials, and one lost star because its..." Read more
Customers find the book humorous, with one mentioning they laughed out loud while reading it.
"...I reminisced back and laughed out loud. Little uses a plethora of examples from a worldwide set of facts and anecdotally relates them to the reader...." Read more
"This was my first introduction to Gabriel Wyner. He is very energetic, funny and systematic when it comes to learning languages and sharing his hard..." Read more
"...and an easy read- the explanations are simple, clear, and often humorous." Read more
"...The author is very encouraging as well as humorous too. He uses a method that is easy to understand and continually repeats it throughout the book...." Read more
Customers appreciate the flashcard techniques in the book, with several mentioning the use of Anki electronic flashcards.
"...and practical advice, complete with recommended apps and techniques for making flash cards, instructions on what order to learn various parts of..." Read more
"...This is the cutting edge of language learning: Anki electronic flashcards, how to use Google Images for language learning, accessing the hidden..." Read more
"...With the online links to Anki and techniques for creating flashcards and learning vocabulary, I am now on my way to speaking Spanish...." Read more
"...being aware of your mouth, tongue movements when forming words, anki flash cards, and goggle images in your target language to name a few." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's ease of use, with some finding it clear with daily steps and simple to apply, while others find it tedious and not a how-to guide for language learning.
"...and building a personal connection to vocabulary makes the process engaging and efficient...." Read more
"...Although the book seems a bit wordy and possibly repetitive at first, it is organized to get the concepts across, which are needed to understand WHY..." Read more
"...The author provides detailed and clear instructions, including videos, on how to use the Anki flashcard software..." Read more
"...Plus this process isn't the least bit enjoyable. Making cards was time consuming. Repping the same sentences over again is tedious...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2025I wish I had found Fluent Forever 10 years ago—my language-learning journey would have been so much smoother and more effective! Gabriel Wyner’s approach is both practical and innovative, focusing on memory techniques and pronunciation from the start. His emphasis on using spaced repetition and building a personal connection to vocabulary makes the process engaging and efficient.
As someone who speaks multiple languages, I found his insights invaluable, even for refining skills in languages I already know. This book is a must-read for anyone serious about mastering a new language. Highly recommended!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2025Added to my collection. Easy read with great info.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2015This is a good find for anyone serious about language learning. After bumbling around I had probably come up with about two thirds of the same sort of process described here, and it has certainly saved me a lot of trouble in finding websites (I never was very good at searching the net). It's always nice to have help from someone who has been before you. I really am appreciating the section on using the free Anki flashcard software which I had not known about. It's probably the best free electronic flashcard program out there (at least of the ones that work with Windows), that I know of, and the instructions are helpful.
I absolutely agree with the author's basic premise that one cannot learn a language properly without knowing the sounds. Instead of paper flashcards, you can use the electronic ones and even add audio clips. This, along with the Microsoft keyboard Layout Creator, is enabling me to become paper-free and has saved me from a roomful of stacks of paper and notebooks already. (The dictionaries take up quite enough space, thank you!) The MSKLC program enabled me to make one general keyboard for Western European Languages by defining "dead keys", so all I have to do now is switch between one multilingual keyboard and the one for my non-Western language. I mention this because he does not address typing issues in this book, and it is a necessary consideration, especially (for example) when faced with the possibility of having to spend months learning how to write a right-to-left script, and considering that the handwritten forms in some languages differ significantly from the printed ones. And good luck trying to find a textbook on how to do that longhand! So the typing issue is very important.
He also discusses using the IPA. I would also recommend the IPA Handbook for anyone looking for the computer codes for the IPA symbols. But for those who have trouble going to the new technology, he also describes how to set up regular paper flashcards, too. According to the author, if one uses paper flashcards, knowing how to use the IPA is even more important.
Although the book seems a bit wordy and possibly repetitive at first, it is organized to get the concepts across, which are needed to understand WHY some methods work and others don't.. I really think a young person in school could benefit from a lot of the information here and use it to make more effective use of his study time. The core of the book is really about the effective use of a Spaced Repetition System. An SRS system such as the Anki cards can be used for most any subject, not just languages.
The book is really a good buy for the money. It appears the author is planning to generate his real income from the language-training packages he is developing for the phonetics for various languages. I cannot comment on those as he is not working on any packages for a language that I am interested in, according to the website. The language-training packages sound like a phenomenally good idea, though, but as far as it concerns anyone not interested in the ones on the list, he would have to do it the hard way and find a really accurate list of the IPA symbols for his language and learn the sounds from one of the various websites that have IPA sound clips. And find some good lists of words paired up for contrasting "Twin" or sounds or "minimal pairs" and hopefully find a native speaker who can record them for you. Which is what the internet is supposed to be good for: helping you find things, -- and people.
I was introduced to the IPA through "Pronounce it Perfectly in French." The Barron's series would work for anyone interested of course, in what they have to offer. So there is a market out there for putting together audio materials for languages other than French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, and Portuguese! In the meantime, I guess we have to do it the hard way. This book is, I think, encouraging for a beginner and also helpful for those who have failed attempts at language learning and couldn't understand why they failed. It certainly helped me when I seemed to have become absolutely stuck in trying to use the internet to find resources for learning my chosen (non-European) language. It certainly gave me a nice boost.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2025If I were learning a new language from the start, I would use the methods in this book. Lots of practical advice, but not just random thought of what worked for the author. What really works to learn a new language?
An Excellent resource.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2014I've been dabbling in learning a second language for some time now, and always seem to lose steam. I had tried various text books, audio courses, and Anki decks that I found in Anki's database, but never made much progress. That's where Mr. Wyner's book came in. I was initially skeptical, but elected to risk the twelve bucks for a copy after I read a guest post by Wyner on Tim Ferriss' site.
In short, it's worth every penny. Other reviews detail what the book is made up of, so for brevity I won't include a detailed list. This book's value, in my opinion, lies in the breadth of techniques Wyner offers the reader. I'm familiar with immersion programs like Middlebury, websites like iTalki, and mnemonic devices, including the PAO system used by memory athletes. However, awareness of such things has only come after years of slogging around on the net, reading books here and there, and talking with professors at my college. Wyner's book would have shaved years off of my own journey into languages, and he includes many more resources I wasn't aware of that are worth the price of the book alone (and that's not even including the FREE resources he links to on his website).
Where Wyner truly shines is his mastery of Anki's software. I have used Anki for some basic vocab stuff before, and had made some flashcards for classes before, but nothing nearly so in-depth as what he recommends. Wyner is truly an Anki-ninja, and clearly one of the beneficent ninjas, as he not only extolls its proper use, but also provides tutorials on how to maximize Anki so that one entry can become up to six flashcards, but also how to make web browsers to the mindless work for you.
The icing on the cake is the emphasis on auditory and pronunciation training. By focusing on repeatedly testing minimal pairs (words that are *almost* the same that non-native speakers might not hear the difference between), Wyner asserts that we can indeed begin to hear the difference between speech sounds that we had been unable to distinguish before. He demonstrates how to make Anki cards for this sort of practice, but he's also in the process of creating "pronunciation trainers" that work within the Anki framework. I don't mind saying that I've pre-purchased the Russian trainer, which will hopefully be out soon.
In closing, this book is a great asset for language learners of all sorts. The author wisely avoids getting bogged down in cases, tenses, declensions, etc, as each language has its own unique set of rules to learn. Instead, he brings to light a number of efficient and effective tools that help the learner to spend their time wisely. Having added about a hundred new words into my Russian vocabulary this week through efficient learning, I'm motivated to learn more.
Top reviews from other countries
- Andrii SerhiienkoReviewed in Sweden on April 2, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Read it, if you want to learn a language
I read the first 100 pages of the book, but already I can say that it is worth the money. The book brings solid ideas on why you might be failing to learn a language and what to do with it.
- Mark C.Reviewed in Germany on March 13, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars A most useful book!
I was born in the US, which means I was proficient speaking English but no other languages. I moved to Europe, and learned German the "hard way," meaning that I did it without really taking meaningful lessons, speaking English most of the time but wanting to speak German. Then I learned a smattering of Russian via audiotapes, which worked ok for directions and restaurants (my husband would like more milk) but not so much for conversation. Now I have taken a job in Slovakia, and there just are not many resources out there for a "small" language with many bigger cousins. Cue Fluent Forever.
Positive:
1. I really enjoyed reading the book and the author's style. Light hearted and funny. Really a joy to read
2. I am 100% sure that the system will work as advertised. completely convinced that someone will learn a language in record time.
Neutral (real life)
1. There are no shortcuts in life. Same here. The system requires to painstakingly create flashcards by hand or via a program called Anki. And then practice daily. The end result will be to learn the language as quickly as possible. It is just A LOT OF WORK. And that is the difficulty. It takes an incredible amount of discipline to use this system.
Negative
1. The web tool the author recommends - forvo.com - no longer allows the downloading of audio files for the correct pronunciation. Not a dealbreaker by any means, but it would be nice if the author updated the website to indicate this.
I have started and stopped several times. I am starting again now. It might be easier when learning the language is an absolute necessity, or for a person of leisure who has extra time to drudge away creating and practicing flashcards. The reality (for me) is that the international language of business in English, so it difficult to justify the time investment because I want to build a business and want to devote as much time as possible to that, let alone spend quality time with my family.
Having said that, I would recommend this book without reservation for anyone who REALLY WANTS to learn a language. Having tried a few different ways to get somewhat proficient at a few languages, this way is certainly the best that I have experienced. If only I could do it myself.
- Chris DowningReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 9, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Kick Start Your Language Study!
I feel like I have been learning Italian forever. I first went to Italy for three months in 1968 to work - that's a clue about age. But after a visut for a week at guitar camp up in the Dolomites, I realised I needed to work hard to get fluent. So I went the traditional route and started lessons at the local college. well, that didn't come out too week as I got ribbed the next guitar workshop about what had I been doing - Italian still really poor. And oh dear - the same the next year! So started this year's study with a new vigour and came across this book. Wow what an uplifting read. I immediately started doing the flash card exercises and noticed the difference in less than a week - noticing that there had been words I should have know easily by now that we're troubling me. The book will recommend you get a simple phrase book - Lonely Planet Italian, flash cards or an app like ANKI to do the same on a phone, tablet, or PC, a simple grammar book (unlike my tome written for Cambridge language students!), and a study diary. You wi,, still need a teacher at the beginning minimum.
The book lays out a clear plan to follow and simple tools to help progress. (My teacher was exasperated and said I have been telling g you this stuff for years - maybe it's something about how it's been laid out in the book - but I must have been sleepwalking when the teacher told me!)
Well worth buying if you are serious about crashing through the learning barriers and getting good, fast. The author even gives you the plan so for becoming fluent in 90 days - but you'd be doing a good three hours a day. If you want a set of tools for learning efficiently, they are all here. No easy fixes or tricks, but like me you will Lear what to do, in what order, and how much, and finally feel confident you are investigating time and effort on the most efficient route.
I think the nature of what you do with a book like this lends itself better to a physical book rather than an ebook.
- AnyaReviewed in Canada on March 27, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars A thorough, powerful and logical method to learn any language and keep it forever.
While this book does not teach you any language, it does teach you a strong process for going about to learn your language of choice.
The first bit is how memory works, not so much a mnemonic memory system like Harry Lorrayne or Domenic O'Brien, but rather the basics of memory such as cramming for tests and the results thereof. The idea it presents, is that the longer we go before attempting to recall information, the better it will stick in the long-term (if we're still able to recall that information).
The core of the book is a memory technique called SRS (something like Strategic Recall System). We basically construct flash cards, with an image on one side and our word (or phrase, gender, context, grammatical rule, etc) on the other. There are several 'levels' in the system, with new material placed into 'level one' on a daily basis. Anything that is reviewed successfully moves up to the next level. Anything that has been forgotten gets moved back down to level one. Level one is cleared each day (worked through until everything is in level two). Over time, various levels are worked... Day 1, do Levels 1 and 5. Day 2, do Levels 1 and 3 and 7... (or whatever, I just made those up). The rotation is complete every 64 days.
If you remember something successfully, at successively greater delays, after enough repetitions it is part of your long-term memory. Anything that was previously remembered but has been forgotten, will be easier to learn the second time (as demonstrated in the early sections of this book), so having the answer to whatever you're attempting to recall... available as an immediate reminder (on the opposite side of your flash card), reinforces the connection.
This book details where to get your images, which words to go for first, which languages are easiest/hardest for a native English speaker (which doesn't imply you cannot go for a harder language first). It details the importance of the sounds of the language, and how to learn to differentiate between (currently) very similar sounds, until your ear naturally recognizes the distinction between them. It (and the authors website) has free recommendations on tools (not free) for your language, for example a pronunciation guide, and grammar guide, a phrase book, a frequency dictionary, etc... that are good options for your language. The author's site has free tools, for listening to numerous languages.
The approach is logical and the reasons for that approach are explained. I've decided to pick up French and Spanish, as an exercise in keeping my mind active. I'm already looking ahead to which additional languages I'd like to do next.
- Gyana MahapatraReviewed in India on March 8, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Must buy
The best book on language. Must buy