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Didn't this site use to have video game bundles?
So, the main price, the linux programming interface by Michael Kerrisk, is it any good? I see stellar reviews on Amazon, but only 9 of them?
It's an excellent book, highly recommended. Copy pasting a review I wrote a few years ago [https://eli.thegreenplace.net/2012/12/29/summary-of-reading-...]:

[...] many books have tried to be the successors to Richard Stevens' legendary APUE. I think that "The Linux Programming Interface" is one of the very few successes in that endeavor. This 1552 book has truly encyclopedic scope, although it focuses only on the Linux flavor of Unix. It's best treated as a reference, rather than a tutorial to read from cover to cover. That said, I read a good portion of its chapters whole (in addition to skimming through the rest), and the book is so well written it makes a very pleasant read. It explains many complex topics in great depth; even topics which don't have good coverage in other places, like pseudo-terminals. I enjoyed reading, and I will definitely use it as a reference when the opportunity presents itself.

Thanks, I might even go for a hardcover then,it's around cdn$100 from reputable sellers on amazon, if truly a successor to APUE that's worth it.
It's really strange that price went up so much. I bought the hardcover new from Amazon for $60 in 2013.
Off-topic, but I have to thank you for your amazing blog posts and Stack Overflow answers regarding LLVM internals. As a grad student in systems software, I can't even begin to account for how much time, energy, and loss-of-consciousness-due-to-head-trauma-from-repeatedly-banging-my-head-against-a-wall you've saved me from. Thank you so much!!
Thanks for the kind feedback, very happy I could help :)
I recall reading it cover to cover in 2011 (I had a lot of time sitting at a desk). I remember it was really good. Really did the job. Not just a reference book, but readable. I've got a hardback edition a few feet from me as I type this. It's good.

I don't know if it's thirty dollars good (although I see I paid thirty GBP for my hardback back in 2011), but it's good.

TLPI is worth whatever price is being charged for it. Literally invaluable in my opinion.
I already have most of these books, including TLPI, and that alone is worth the price of the whole bundle. How Linux works is also a great introduction.
Might be the first UNIX-focused bundle where I don't pay for the top tier. I'm not even sure I'll go for the $15 tier--everything I want is $8 or below.

Can anyone make a compelling case for any of the books in the $15 tier?

The real price for the book is usually paid in time. The right book at the right time can pay off richly in time and money.
The Book of PF was pretty highly lauded in some comments on another HN thread, maybe a month or a bit more ago.

I'll see whether I can find that thread; I think I commented on it.

--

P.S. Comment on that thread mentioning it. As I replied, it's also in O'Reilly's Safari online subscription library.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17360713

I guess the author has a lot of its content online, as well, maybe in somewhat different form.

My book is in there. So go get it!
Did No Starch contact you at all prior to the bundle?

I've always vaguely wondered about the economics of these bundles. As a consumer I love them, but I'm sure quite a few publishers and, more importantly, authors might feel like they devalue the content a bit too much.