Math Reading Challenge discussion
2020 prompts
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02 A math-related book published the year you were born
date
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Colin wrote: "A hint: Wikipedia lists some books by publication date, so something like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categor... (for me) is a good starting point."
Nice! I've also had some luck using the advanced search function on the University of Utah (because that's the academic institution where I have library privilege) library website and filtering by year of publication and topic. Unfortunately, it seems to turn up a lot of things that are more along the lines of policy reports by various education institutions, but I've found some books that might be worth reading there.
Nice! I've also had some luck using the advanced search function on the University of Utah (because that's the academic institution where I have library privilege) library website and filtering by year of publication and topic. Unfortunately, it seems to turn up a lot of things that are more along the lines of policy reports by various education institutions, but I've found some books that might be worth reading there.




Seems that it meets the criteria and I enjoy science fiction. I read Asimov in my teen years so this will be a throwback in multiple ways.

My personal choice, of year 1988, will be Neverness. Seems like a tough read though. Fingers crossed I"ll be able to read it!
Colin wrote: "It seems AbeBooks has a search by publication date function. Similarly, there’s a lot of reports and textbooks, but it does narrow things down."
Please share away your experience since I'm more than excited to add this to my list, since complexity, chaos and fractals is one heck of a scientific field!


My personal choice, of year 1988, will be [book:Neverness|96..."
Thanks for the link! I found a book that looks interesting: Q.E.D by Bruce Stanley Burdick, 1984.
Share your recommendations for your year or tips for searching for math books by year on this thread.