I took calculus many years ago and my work now involves
a fair amount of math, like, I got to play around with
stuff like gamma function (which I found Nahin's An
Imaginary Tale an excellent read), numerical methods,
but nothing fancy.
I discovered Calculus made easy a while ago, and I feel
that I got the short end of the stick when I took calculus
in my first year. Sure, the prof showed us how to do things
like integration by parts, gave us a few examples, exercises,
etc. I encountered these concepts again in later courses, but
no one ever explained it quite like Thompson. The same for
Feynman, we took physics but don't we all wish that the prof
could explain it the way Feynman does.
Reading Thompson or Feynman gives me the joy of
rediscovering things that are somehow ruined by bad profs.
I read Thompson's Calculus made easy in bed and find myself
saying, why on Earth didn't the prof say this to me. Quite a
few Homer moments - "that's where that comes from, doh!"
To make a long story short (kind of late for that now, :-)) I
am looking for books where the authors explore things a bit
deeper, in a leisure pace if possible, and not much of "here
we have the recipes for all possible problems that you may
encounter". The latter ones have their own purpose and are
handy to have, but I am looking for something to read in bed,
against gf's wish, not at my desk.
Thanks for listening to the ranting,
Michuco