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pozorvlak ([personal profile] pozorvlak) wrote2006-11-07 01:13 pm
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Outside of a dog, a man's best friend is a book

Inside a dog, it's too dark to read. (Groucho Marx)

One of my favourite entries in my list of email signatures is the following quotation:
A really good, readable textbook/manual is worth its weight in very, very, very nice coffee.
   -- Tim Sweetman
A while ago, my sigmonster included this at the end of an email to my flatmate, who responded
There is not such a thing as very, very, very nice coffee.
There isn't probably such a thing as a good, readable textbook/manual, either.
Now, the first bit is just because he's a Philistine and doesn't drink coffee :-). But how about the second bit? This made me think about which books, exactly, deserve that description.

In computing, the book against which I measure all others is Wall, Christiansen and Orwant's Programming Perl. It's witty, erudite, clear and thought-provoking - it explains the hairy details of the Perl interpreter's inner workings by making puns in Anglo-Saxon, for goodness' sake, and somehow this is the perfect explanation. But my favourite bit has to be the explanation of the regex engine in terms of The Little Engine that Could :-). Never afraid to fly in the face of conventional wisdom, it's had a real effect on the way I think about programming. And it's incredibly comprehensive.

Coming in a close second has to be Knuth's The TeXBook, for all the same reasons. As for other books... well, K&R, obviously, and possibly Stroustrup's The C++ Programming Language. And I'd like to mention Scott Meyers' Effective C++ series, although it had the opposite effect on me from that intended: it made me decide that any language which forced you to think about this arcane rubbish was clearly not ready for prime-time. Paul Graham's On Lisp also looks pretty good, but I haven't read the whole thing. Then again, I've only read about half of the TeXBook, so what the hell. The BBC Basic manual was pretty good. The Gang of Four book is mind-expanding, as well as being clear and readable, and Martin Fowler's Refactoring, though lighter-weight, deserves a mention. And I'd like to give an honourable mention to Andrei Alexandrescu's Modern C++ Design: Applied Generic and Design Patterns, which (though the depth precludes its being clear and readable enough to make the cut) is simply mindblowing.

In maths, there don't seem to be so many good candidates. Halmos' Naive Set Theory. Birkhoff and MacLane's Survey of Modern Algebra. Ian Anderson's Introduction to Combinatorial Mathematics (though it's a bit too short). Maybe Apostol's book on analysis. Derek Holton's Problem Solving series, if they count as textbooks. Maybe Borceux's Handbook of Categorical Algebra. Mac Lane's Categories for the Working Mathematician I exclude for the same reason as Modern C++ Design: it's simply too dense to be easily readable. I had an excellent book on group theory written by someone with a German-sounding surname, possibly beginning with W, but I gave it away and can't find it on Amazon. Not that I'm biased, but Wilson Sutherland's Introduction to Topological and Metric Spaces is great. Tom Leinster's book Higher Operads, Higher Categories (which probably shouldn't count as a textbook) is if anything too readable: I often find I've read several pages but haven't really engaged with the meaning.

I suppose it's been eight years since I used textbooks for any other subjects, but I'm surprised I can't remember good textbooks from before that. I remember my history textbook from when I was about 12, which covered a period on a double page - the left-hand page was facts, and the right-hand page was a description of the time by a fictional typical character of that period. But that's it.

Of course, it would be remiss of me not to mention Charlie Dancey's truly excellent Encyclopaedia of Ball Juggling :-) EDIT: And Lofty Wiseman's SAS Survival Handbook, and Geoffrey Budworth's The Knot Book. And How to Hold a Crocodile :-). Divers readers (thanks, everyone!) have left recommendations for textbooks on topics ranging from criminal law to pharmacology, and from electronics to adult movie-making - see the comments.
So, I turn it over to you. What are your favourites? What textbooks do you think are worth their weight in very, very, very nice coffee? :-)

[identity profile] r-e-mercia.livejournal.com 2006-11-07 05:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Gotta be McKendrick's excellent book on contract law. Pithy and inspiring, much like the man himself. Craig's textbook on EC law is also very good. As a door stop. Or a paperweight. Or for standing on if you can't reach something.
But enough about law textbooks. My favourite textbooks are without doubt the "worst case scenario" series. They're utterly joyous, and might come in very handy one day. I'm also an enthusiastic convertee to the handbag book of girlie emergencies, which has taught me everything i need to know about being girlie (cos let's face it, I'm not exactly intuitively girlie now am I?)
Incidentally, there was a thing on BBC R2 about how much the average person's weight in gold would be. Can't recall how much it was, though. Gosh that was a pointless witter.


[identity profile] mi-guida.livejournal.com 2006-11-07 11:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember the weight in gold thing! And I can't remember either. But it was interesting.

Um. Textbooky-books. Herring's Crim one is definitely worth it; admin books made me cry (or maybe that was my head) and are not.

Swallows and Amazons! The whole series, I used to know the pages references for everything, including making netting (Great Northern), skinning a rabbit (Picts and Martyrs), guddling trout (again, Picts and Martyrs), their code (Ack... the winter one...), tying a bowline knot (Missee Lee)... ahem. Anyway, jolly useful books.

Eerm... yes. Can't think of any others right now.

[identity profile] pozorvlak.livejournal.com 2006-11-08 01:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Which reminds me - Lofty Wiseman's SAS Survival Handbook should make the list. Great fun. I've never tried to use most of it, mind :-)

And, talking of bowline knots, Geoffrey Budworth's The Knot Book (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Knot-Book-Geoffrey-Budworth/dp/071602084X/sr=1-32/qid=1162993014/ref=sr_1_32/026-5600560-0659614?ie=UTF8&s=books) is great. 100 knots (though some are duplicates) many of them useful, and all of them well-explained and clearly diagrammed.