Hi Paden,
I am glad you registered your picks because your perspective may parallel Gecko, and what you find good might be just right for him.
It is true that Rovelli
Quantum Gravity is focused on LQG and the first book of its kind. But if you buy it there is a risk that you will feel you wasted your money because 3/4 of it is too hard. It is a textbook for graduate students motivated to get into QG research.
It has (roughly 1/4) that is accessible and gives a lot of insight to the history of physics gradually improving ideas of space and time---and the philosophical questions---and the overview. But
even that accessible 1/4 of the book is not in the slightest popularized or water-down
I think it is a great book, and a landmark book. but 3/4 is hard as hell, and the other 1/4 is real interesting but no way easy.
So I would go download the free copy and see how much you like----and then buy it if you then decide its worth the money. As you will find out when you get to university, college textbooks are majorly expensive. your calculus text can run you $60 unless you get it second hand.
Rovelli's book costs $70 from amazon. It is not like a popularized science book designed to sell a million copies.
So my advice is google "rovelli" and get it off the web---if you haven't already.
I did that (and then I liked it so i ordered it from Amazon too)
Hello Gecko, I should have answered earlier.
Here is the link to that thread where we are storing all kinds of LQG links.
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=348504&posted=1#post348504
Gecko said:
i would also like to attempt to read the last two you posted. do you know the link to the Rovelli's program thread? and is smolin's article on the internet? or is it a book?
If you do that link you will get pointers to the free download of Rovelli's book, and here it is plus a link to Smolin "An Invitation"
----quote from that link-basket thread---
Carlo Rovelli's book
Quantum Gravity
http://www.cpt.univ-mrs.fr/~rovelli/rovelli.html
contains introduction, historical and philosophical perspective as well as technical stuff.
Best general audience article available online is probably
Rovelli's November 2003 "Physics World" article which Astekar has
at his website. The title was
Loop Quantum Gravity
http://cgpg.gravity.psu.edu/people/Ashtekar/articles/rovelli03.pdf
Another good general audience article (but not available online) is
Lee Smolin's Atoms of Space and Time in the January 2004 issue
of the "Scientific American".
Probably the best introduction for physics students and physicists who are not specialists in QG is by Lee Smolin
An Invitation to Loop Quantum Gravity
http://arxiv.org/hep-th/0408048
---endquote---