I had the terrible misfortune of finding physics too late in life. It's not that I can't enjoy it by reading books like the ones you see here on our list, or that I can't have great conversations with what few of my friends also understand its basics, it's just that I spent a lot of time and education devoted to writing. I didn't take my first physics course until my last semester of college, and it was the most exciting class I'd taken in four years.
Jul 24, 2017 Answer Wiki. Physics book by Resnick and Halliday – This is the book which is very good for theory purpose. This internationally known book has good and clear theory which is very essential for doing numerical. Also contains good solved questions.
As a writer (I specifically studied poetry in school), I received a training that worshiped the ability of the best writers to distill complex emotional realities into immediately relatable images. You can imagine my surprise when my physics professor proved better at this – albeit applied to physical, mathematical concepts instead of emotional ones – than any of my lit professors.
To make matters more exciting, this particular professor had a better sense of humor than any teacher I'd had since high school, and I recalled then that all of my wittiest teachers throughout my life had taught the sciences. There's something in the water they drink, I'd say.
So, here you have physics books by a collection of authors, each of whom is equipped with a scientist's profound understanding of the natural world, as well as that sharp, scientific sense of humor. Somehow, most have also each acquired the distillation power by which they render these incredibly complicated ideas understandable to almost any reader.