A What is the Best Resource for Learning String Theory as a Side Project?

Bancrates
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Already have prerequisites under my belt (QFT, GR and Differential geometry). Want to learn string theory in a coherent, logical way.
I've completed my PhD and am leaving the field to take up a career elsewhere, however I'm interested in developing my knowledge of string theory as a (potentially lifelong) side project. I have a solid understanding of GR and some extensions (my PhD was in relativistic effects in cosmology, and some modified gravity), a decent background in QFT & renormalisation (took multiple MSc level courses, done some study of QCD) although it was a while ago now, familiarity with differential geometry and the formulation of Yang-Mills/Einstein-Cartan gravity using forms, and Lie groups/algebras and their representations.

I took courses in SUSY and String theory on my masters, but they were unsatisfactory - the SUSY course was poorly lectured/structured, and whilst I remember bits and bobs, I don't feel confident with the subject.

The string theory course turned out not to be a string theory course at all. The professor who was teaching it had a philosophy which was "there's no point in teaching you string theory, since it won't be useful to you at this stage and if you want to actually do research in theoretical physics you can learn it yourself, so instead, I will deliver a workshop on various different bits of theoretical physics that might actually help you in your research careers".
It was actually a great course, I ended up learning a lot of representation theory and some stuff about generalised E&M on branes, however I left it feeling I still had no idea what string theory was actually all about.

I'm aware of the main textbooks in these subjects - but where would you recommend starting? I've had a look at Green, Schwarz & Witten, but it seems very wordy and not too accessible. Zwiebach on the otherhand seems a bit slow going.

Is there a particularly good lecture series/notes to start with, or a textbook that you'd strongly recommend? I've heard people say that Polchinski is the place to start...
 
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Yes! This looks absolutely perfectly pitched for me. Thank you!
 
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this thread is to open up discussion on Gravi-GUT as theories of everything GUT or Grand Unified Theories attempt to unify the 3 forces of weak E&M and strong force, and Gravi-GUT want to add gravity. this peer reviewed paper in a journal on Gravi-GUT Chirality in unified theories of gravity F. Nesti1 and R. Percacci2 Phys. Rev. D 81, 025010 – Published 14 January, 2010 published by Physical Review D this paper is cited by another more recent Gravi-GUT these papers and research...
In post #549 here I answered: And then I was surprised by the comment of Tom, asking how the pairing was done. Well, I thought that I had discussed it in some thread in BSM, but after looking at it, it seems that I did only a few sparse remarks here and there. On other hand, people was not liking to interrupt the flow of the thread and I have been either contacted privately or suggested to open a new thread. So here it is. The development can be traced in some draft papers...

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