Since mid June last year, you have been playing mostly blitz and bullet games. These time format don't give you enough time to think and apply the lessons from the books you read. I recommend that you start playing rapid games again or slower time formats.
Studying book (not just reading them) is good, but you need the right books at the right level. Levy Rozman's How to Win at Chess is probably fine, but Silman's The Complete Book of Chess Strategy: Grandmaster Techniques from A to Z is far above your level.
What you need to learn first is basic opening principles, such as not bringing out your queen in the first moves of the game (Isn't this covered in chapter 2 of How to Win at Chess?), and checking whether you or your opponent are leaving any pieces hanging.
In this game from today, for example, you made many premature and pointless moves with the queen, instead of developing knights and bishops first.
You should have a look at the study plans that are linked at the top of the beginners forum:
- NM Dane Mattson's Starting Out Study Guide (0-600 Elo),
- NM Robert Ramirez's Beginner Study Guide (600-1000 Elo).
How Should i get better at chess? I have played 100s of games a lot of puzzles, I recently took Chess books, One was be Gotham Chess: How to win at Chess and the other one was by The Complete Book of Chess Strategy: Grandmaster Techniques from A to Z
Book by Jeremy Silman, That is improving me everyday i feel my self understand chess better just by reading the books