Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It
Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It book cover

Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It

Paperback – August 5, 2014

Price
$15.29
Format
Paperback
Pages
336
Publisher
Harmony
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385348119
Dimensions
6.2 x 0.72 x 9.3 inches
Weight
11.6 ounces

Description

"This is a fun way for anyone to discover the secrets of language instruction presented in a conversational, stress-free way — no matter how little time you have." --The Chicago Tribune “A brilliant and thoroughly modern guide to learning new languages. Fluent Forever won't teach you French, or German, or any other languagexa0-- but it will teach you how to learn whatever language you do want to learn, and to learn it faster, and more efficiently.xa0 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! “Never before have I seen a language-learning method -- or method for learning anything! -- that synchs up so perfectly with our current scientific understanding of how memory works. I now understand why my past attempts to learn other languages (Spanish, German, Latin) have left me with little more than a smattering of near-random vocabulary words, and I'm inspired to try again. 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 more thanxa0meets the daunting challenge of learning a new language by giving the reader a solid game plan based on how people actually learn and memorize information. From the first chapter, I couldn't wait to get started using Wyner's techniques and tons of resources. His writing is engaging, smart, and conversational, making learning a real joy. If you've ever wanted to become fluent in another language, do yourself a favor and start reading Fluent Forever now.” --Melanie Pinola, Contributor Writer for LIfehacker.com and author of LinkedIn in 30 Minutes " Fluent Forever is the book I wish I had had during my numerous failed attempts at learning different languages. It’s a refreshingly fun and engaging guide that shows you how to language-hack your brain.xa0 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.xa0 This book is a winner!xa0 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 “An excellent book…Wyner writes in an engaging and accessible way, weaving in his personal language journey.xa0His method, proven by his own achievements, is clear: focus on pronunciation, avoid translation, and use spaced repetition extensively.xa0 And he offers lots of specific techniques to make sure you’ll never forget what you’ve learned.xa0 I'd recommend this book to anyone who is serious --xa0not just aspiring but really serious -- about becoming fluent in a foreign language.” --Kevin Chen, Co-Founder,xa0italki.com “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. Pick a foreign language (yes, including English) and voilà : el futuro es tuyo .xa0High-five to Gabriel Wyner!” --Ilan Stavans, author of Dictionary Days: A Defining Passion Gabriel Wyner graduated summa cum laude at USC, where he won the school’s Renaissance Award.xa0 His essay on language learning for Lifehacker.com was one of the site’s most read in 2012. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1Introduction: Stab, Stab, StabIf 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 MandelaAmericans 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 BarryLanguage 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.BeginningsSo 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 LearningThis 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.I decided to use all of these methods at once. I used memorization software on my smartphone to get the French into my head, and I made sure that none of my flash cards had a word of English on them. I began making flash cards for the pronunciation rules, added a bunch of pictures for the nouns and some verbs, learned the verb conjugations, and then built up to simple French definitions of more abstract concepts. By June, in my hour a day on the subway, I had learned three thousand words and grammar concepts. When I arrived at Middlebury, I waited in a room for my entrance interview in French. This interview was meant to ensure that I hadn’t done anything stupid, like cheat on my online placement test. It was the first time I had ever spoken French in my life. The teacher sat down and said, “Bonjour,” and I responded right back with the very first word that came into my brain: “Bonjour.” So far, so good. As our conversation evolved, I was amazed to find that I knew all the words she was saying, and I knew all the words I needed to respond. I could think in French! It was halting, but it was French. I was stunned. Middlebury bumped me into the advanced class. In those seven weeks, I read ten books, wrote seventy pages worth of essays, and my vocabulary grew to forty-five hundred words. By the beginning of August, I was fluent in French.The Game PlanWhat is fluency? Each of us will find a different answer to this question. The term is imprecise, and it means a little less every time someone writes another book, article, or spam email with a title like “U Can B FLUENT in 7 DAY5!1!” Still, we maintain an image of fluency in our minds: a summer afternoon in a Parisian café, casually chatting up the waitress without needing to worry about verb conjugations or missing words in our vocabularies. Beyond that café, we must decide individually how far we wish to go.I would confidently describe myself as fluent in German. I’ve lived in Austria for six years and will happily discuss anything with anyone, but I certainly needed to dance around a few missing words to get out of a €200 fine for my rental car’s broken gas cap. (Apparently, the word for “gas cap” is Tankdeckel, and the words for “I don’t give a damn if I’m the first person to drive this car, the spring holding the gas cap closed was defective” start with “Das ist mir völlig Wurst .u2008.u2008.” and go on from there.) You’ll have to determine for yourself whether your image of fluency includes political discussions with friends, attending poetry readings, working as a secret agent, or lecturing on quantum physics at the Sorbonne.We struggle to reach any degree of fluency because there is so much to remember. The rulebook of the language game is too long. We go to classes that discuss the rulebook, we run drills about one rule or another, but we never get to play the game. On the off chance that we ever reach the end of a rulebook, we’ve forgotten most of the beginning already. Moreover, we’ve ignored the other book (the vocabulary book), full of thousands upon thousands of words that are just as hard to remember as the rules.Forgetting is our greatest foe, and we need a plan to defeat it. What’s the classic language-learning success story? A guy moves to Spain, falls in love with a Spanish girl, and spends every waking hour practicing the language until he is fluent within the year. This is the immersion experience, and it defeats forgetting with brute force. In large part, our proud, Spanish-speaking hero is successful because he never had any time to forget. Every day, he swims in an ocean of Spanish; how could he forget what he had learned? I learned German in this way, given an opportunity to leave my job, move to Vermont, and cut off all ties to the English-speaking world for two full summers. Immersion is a wonderful experience, but if you have steady work, a dog, a family, or a bank account in need of refilling, you can’t readily drop everything and devote that much of your life to learning a language. We need a more practical way to get the right information into our heads and prevent it from leaking out of our ears.I’m going to show you how to stop forgetting, so you can get to the actual game. And I’m going to show you what to remember, so that once you start playing the game, you’re good at it. Along the way, we’ll rewire your ears to hear new sounds, and rewire your tongue to master a new accent. We’ll investigate the makeup of words, how grammar assembles those words into thoughts, and how to make those thoughts come out of your mouth without needing to waste time translating. We’ll make the most of your limited time, investigating which words to learn first, how to use mnemonics to memorize abstract concepts faster, and how to improve your reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills as quickly and effectively as possible.I want you to understand how to use the tools I’ve found along the way, but I also want you to understand why they work. Language learning is one of the most intensely personal journeys you can undertake. You are going into your own mind and altering the way you think. If you’re going to spend months or years working at that goal, you’ll need to believe in these methods and make them your own. If you know how to approach the language game, you can beat it. I hope to show you the shortest path to that goal, so that you can forget the rules and start playing already.After I learned German, I thought, “Ach! If I could just go back in time and tell myself a few things, I would have had a much easier time with this language!” I had precisely the same thought after Italian, French, Russian (which I finally learned in 2012), and Hungarian (2013’s project). This book is my time machine. If I squint my eyes just right, then you are monolingual me from nine years ago, and I’m creating a time paradox by helping you avoid all of the pitfalls and potholes that led me to make my time machine in the first place. You know how it is. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NATIONAL BESTSELLER • For anyone who wants to learn a foreign language, this is the method that will finally make the words stick.
  • “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.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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solid advice = 3.5 stars

I'm an intermediate JP student and was looking for a faster way to reach advanced. "Fluent Forever" doesnt have any ground breaking tips but there was some interesting advice.

1) Wanting to speak a foreign language without learning to read = more time-consuming than learning both
2) Make your own Leitner flash card system or use ANKI
3) Watching movies with subtitles doesnt help listening comprehension cuz you spend more time reading than listening
4) Listening to songs isnt helpful
5) Images are easier to remember than words

I dont agree with tips 3 and 4. I tried watching TV shows without subtitles and was so frustrated I wanted to quit. It's better to skip subtitles on repeat viewings. Listening to songs is a good way to learn vocabulary and get a feel for "real Japanese" so I dont think it's a waste of time at all. Making flashcards by hand gives me cramps so I use ANKI for the hardest grammar and kanji. Author includes websites where you can find low cost tutors
53 people found this helpful
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Helpful

This 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.
7 people found this helpful
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The BEST launguage sytem there is.

I love this book! I have been trying to learn a language for my entire life!!! I am very dyslexic and most programs require you to pass spelling tests which I can not do in a second language. This system just makes so much more sense to my brain. So even if you have struggled for years, try this. And you can use what you learn here to apply to more languages after you complete the first one! I am so excited. I have always LOVED languages but spelling stopped me. I still include spelling but its not holding me back. And I was surprised to learn even though I cant spell it back I do very well at reading it!!! I am learning French first, but I also have always wanted to speak Spanish, Russian, Hebrew, Italian and Chinese (honestly Klingon too, just for fun and my daughter wants to learn Elfin from LOTRs) with this system and time .... we can!!!! I did buy the things Gabe has already put together from his language studies and that made starting off a bit easier., so if he has it for your target language, the extras are worth buying. This system is AWESOME! Thank you Gabe! Your helping my dreams of speaking more then one language come true! I have recommended this countless time to all my homeschooling friends, and anyone who hints they want to learn a second language hears about this book!
5 people found this helpful
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Inspirational guide to actually becoming fluent in your language of choice, as long as you are tech savvy.

This is really "how to learn any language for the tech savvy" because much of the book is about taking advantage of many technologies to aid your language learning experience. There is indeed a very detailed system in place here, and if you are a systematic, tech savvy person this book will be your ticket to actually achieving fluency in your first foreign language.

Already having learned two foreign languages to professional level fluency as an adult, I feel that newcomers to the world of language learning will get a lot more out of this book than someone who has already been around the block a time or two. I also don't like to run my life in a systemic fashion as the author, so I don't like to rely as heavy on spaced repetition techniques as he does, although I do agree they are extremely effective. That said, I did pick up some really neat tricks and he inspired me to finally take a serious look at IPA, so glad I did, because my pronunciation in the language I already know improved dramatically.

I would recommend this book to others, but only if they know their way around technology and are willing to actually take the dive into the immersive world of foreign languages.
5 people found this helpful
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Its a great buy :)

This is a great book and helps condition you into the right mindset when you set out to learn a second language. The only thing that I do not like is that the cover is easy to tear so be careful. By the way this book is better when you take it to FedEx and have it spiraled because this book tends to like to close on you if you are not mindful ( hence why I modified the product to suit my needs )
4 people found this helpful
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An Amazing Book

I've always wanted to learn German when I was in high school - I thought the choices of the ever so popular Spanish and French were silly and after high school I lost it very quickly. The only resource I knew about language learning was Rosetta Stone and I knew it was very expensive, and not knowing if I was going to stick with it, I didn't pursue it.

I forgot how I found this book, but I spend some time reading the first chapter or two and I was hooked. He words it in such an addicting manner and it's hard to put down. To sum up his first chapter, he advises to learn pronunciation first, even before a single word of vocabulary (You'll pick some up on the way) Second, don't translate - A lot of language apps do this (Duolingo, memrise, babbel, etc.) I actually used memrise before I tried Fluent Forever and I'd get to german words and my mind would freeze. Learning two words or phrases together and you will have a harder time remembering them. Third, he says to use an SRS program (spaced repetition program) there's a free one for your computer called Anki and you can make basic flashcards for words and add images and video files very easily & there is a free app for your android smartphone as well.

Gabriel offers pronunciation trainers to get you started. I think they are $12 off his website. He gives you directions how to insert it into Anki and in about 10 minutes per day you can start to learn your language - After I had about 85% of that completed I started to create a vocabulary deck of cards inside the program (He offers directions on how to do that too!) In the back of the book he even has a list of the most commonly used 625 words you'll ever encounter.

My word of advice - I personally would not learn an extremely difficult language right off the bat, I'd learn something relatively close to English (like German, French, Spanish, Italian, etc.) Attempting to learn a difficult language right away and your motivation and desire may diminish very quickly.

My plan is to complete the trainer, learn as much vocab as possible, then learn simple "starter" phrases like "I like this..." or "Where can I find..." and then finally to tackle grammar.

Update on Jan 10. 2017
As I mentioned previously in my review, he gives you a list of the 625 most common used words in any language. I checked when I started making my flashcards and when I finished my last one, and it took me 50 days to make those flashcards. I'm not saying I have all of them memorized, but that's how long it took me once or twice weekly to make all those flashcards.
3 people found this helpful
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EXCELLENT book for language learners!

I HIGHLY recommend this book to anyone looking to seriously learn a language. I took Spanish classes in highschool and college, but I never really learned the language. This year, I made it my goal to change that. I bought this book and read it cover to cover. It is written very well, and the author gives great tips on really learning a language. It's because of this book that I discovered Anki, which has been PHENOMENAL in helping me learn and remember vocabulary. I cannot recommend this book enough! Learning a new language takes a lot of work, and this book lays out a good game plan for getting started.
3 people found this helpful
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At last! A method for learning any language which works!

Having tried all manner of "methods" to learn a language - any language - I'm very happy to have stumbled across Gabriel Wyner's work.

Based on a sound understanding of how languages work, and, in my opinion, strongly influenced by the seminal work of Frederick Bodmer, [[ASIN:B003BF2KUY The Loom of Language]] Wyner incorporates many 21st century learning techniques into the process of learning and never forgetting any language, whilst entertainingly telling us about his journey to fluency forever.

Well worth the money and the [reduced] time to learn the first of many languages of your choice!.
2 people found this helpful
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BUY THIS BOOK BEFORE ANYTHING ELSE

This book is amazing! I don't say that lightly-- I've spent hundreds of dollars on language-learning crap, this is the single most useful tool I've come across for learning ANYTHING!
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Excellent book with solid recommendations for language learning.
2 people found this helpful