Books on LaTeX
Amazon.com

You can search for LaTeX books on Amazon.com. There are 37 books on LaTeX listed, with several recommended. www.amazon.com


Fatbrain.com

Another good source of books on LaTeX, with a list of 57 books on this link. www.fatbrain.com
Fatbrain also sells eMatter: books and articles in PDF form.



Book Suggestions

Leslie Lamport,
LaTeX: A Document Preparation System (2nd ed.), Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1994, ISBN 0-201-52983-1.
The basic concise reference written by the person who originally wrote LaTeX. Good introduction.

Helmut Kopka and Patrick W. Daly,
A Guide to LaTeX (3rd ed.) , Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1999, ISBN 0-201-39825-7.
Good presentation and examples, a pleasant guide, I often use this book for classes in Introductory LaTeX, but it is a good reference for all levels of LaTeX users.

Michel Goossens, Frank Mittelbach and Alexander Samarin,
The LaTeX Companion, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1994, ISBN 0-201-54199-8. When you are ready for more detail on the newer features of LaTeX, this book is a standard.

Michel Goossens, Sebastian Rahtz, and Frank Mittelbach,
The LaTeX Graphics Companion: Illustrating Documents with TeX and PostScript, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1997, ISBN 0-201-85469-4.
Great source of information on graphics. Learn how to include .eps files into a LaTeX document, add color, and much more.

George Grätzer,
First Steps in LaTeX, Birkhäuser Boston, (co-published by Springer-Verlag) ISBN 0-8176-4132-7.
Positive reviews. I saw it in manuscript and it looked pithy and complete. Especially useful for beginners learning AMSTeX commands.

Donald E. Knuth,
The TeXbook, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1987, ISBN 0-201-13448-9.
The definitive reference to TeX, by the author and Grand Master of the language. For those of you that want to look under the hood, and gain an understanding of how LaTeX works and how to write macros, this book is essential.

More AW LaTeX titles...
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