Ask HN: Reccomend an interesting and fun book to learn electronics.

13 points by Beanblabber ↗ HN
Preferably with an emphasized hands on approach.

10 comments

[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 21.8 ms ] thread
Horowitz and Hill's "The Art of Electronics" is the category killer. It's very in-depth and hands on, supplement it with "fun" stuff.
The companion student manual is fun and actually a large part of what make H+H such a great book.
I immediately thought of this book "The Manga Guide to Electricity by Kazuhiro Fujitaki, Matsuda, and Trend-pro Co, Ltd." published by No Starch Press (http://tinyurl.com/mwsw7k)- it's squarely in the "fun" category but it's a little more basic and not really hands on with electronics.
Buy the 200-in-1 Electronics kit sold (at least at one time) by Radioshack. The book is great (though aimed at a young crowd) and is the reason I am now an Electrical Engineer.
Electronics for Dummies is surprisingly good and has lots of hands-on stuff. It also has a great section on microcontrollers.
I just saw this today...it might fit the bill:

"Make: Electronics -- Learning Through Discovery" By Charles Platt; Released: December 2009 (est.) ; http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596153755 "With this practical introductory guide, you'll learn important concepts while you work on real projects."