Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€

Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€

Share this post

Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€
Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€
30 books to help you grow as an engineer πŸ“š
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

30 books to help you grow as an engineer πŸ“š

Book club announcement πŸŽ‰ + a huge list of the most popular and helpful 30 software engineering books, so you don’t have to comb the endless lists on Amazon.

Caleb Mellas's avatar
Caleb Mellas
Jan 31, 2024
βˆ™ Paid
148

Share this post

Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€
Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€
30 books to help you grow as an engineer πŸ“š
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
24
9
Share

Hey friends πŸ‘‹ A big welcome to our newest readers since our last issue πŸŽ‰ It’s an honor that you choose to spend your time with me learning together. I hope these articles provide massive value as you look to level up in your software engineering skills and career – Caleb Mellas, Level up Software Engineering πŸš€


When I think back over my 10 yr career, there are two things that have been a massive part of my growth as an engineer.

  1. Reading good books and applying them

  2. Learning from other growth-minded engineers

To help you with that first thing, I spent hrs putting together this massive list of the most popular and helpful software engineering books, so you don’t have to comb the endless lists on Amazon. πŸ˜…

Let’s dive in πŸ‘‡πŸΌ

1. Clean Code πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/3gYIG30Β 

Clean Code advocates for a number of principles and practices that can help developers write better code, including following the SOLID principles, writing simple, expressive code, and using automated tests to ensure code quality.

This is one of the top 10 all time rated software engineering books.

Pretty fundamental to when I was leveling up into a senior engineer.

2. Software Engineering at Google πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/68Vddg3Β 

This book covers Google's unique engineering culture, processes, and tools and how these aspects contribute to the effectiveness of an engineering organization. It helps explain the differences between engineering and just developing code.

3. It doesn’t have to be crazy at work πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/dfe6iG2Β 

Chaos isn’t the natural state at work.Β  Anxiety isn’t a prerequisite for progress. Sitting in meetings all day isn’t success. This book pushes back against unhealthy practices that have infected the way people work these days.

4. The Software Engineer’s Guidebook πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/7UgpTrR

This book really feels like the missing guidebook I wish I had early on in my career.

It covers many of the soft skills that most folks have to learn on the job.

Things like:

  • How to ace a performance review

  • How to manage a project successfully

  • What it looks like to β€œown your career”

  • How to develop a business understanding

I’m only 1/2 way through, but I plan to read this book multiple times – it’s so good.

5. Eloquent JavaScript πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/0osBuVbΒ 

A beginner-friendly book that covers the basics of the JavaScript language in a clear and engaging way. This book is best for people who are new to programming and are looking to learn JavaScript from scratch.

This book is also free to read online!

6. Practical Object Oriented Design πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/6wlooXd

It explains object-oriented design using realistic, understandable examples.Β It’s a practical, readable introduction to how OOD can lower your costs and improve your applications. It really helped me finally level up in my OOO understanding.

7. Designing Data Intensive Applications πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/1ps842dΒ 

Data is at the center of many challenges in system design today. This book is a guide for understanding how to make make use of data in a way that solves for:

  • scalability

  • consistency

  • reliability

  • efficiency

  • maintainability

8. Staff Engineer πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/1XZr5yhΒ 

At most companies, you'll reach senior software engineer, the career level for software engineers, in five to eight years.

Where do you go from there? If you want to continue with coding, rather than switch to management, Will Larson offers a path for you.

9. Engineers’ Survival Guide πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/3p4Zv0I

If you've been feeling alone in your journey and keep wishing you had a friend or a mentor you could get some advice about non-technical aspects, look no further!

Here’s a survival guide for situations you'll face in your career as an engineer.

10. Modern Software Engineering: Doing What Works to Build Better Software Faster πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/10q4i0PΒ 

How to think about and manage your work more effectively, and genuinely improve the quality of your applications, your mindset, and lives of your team.

11. Software Architecture: The Hard Parts πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/2nqkcxhΒ 

There are no easy decisions in software architecture. With this book, you'll learn how to think critically about the trade-offs involved with distributed architectures.

12. Learning JavaScript Design Patterns πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/fxCmI3FΒ 

A guide to modern design patterns for JavaScript & React, including:

  • modules, mixins, observers and mediators

  • performance

  • server-side rendering, dynamic imports and code-splitting

  • architecture patterns like MVC, MVVM and more.

13. The Pragmatic ProgrammerΒ πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/5TDWayfΒ 

Examines the core of modern software development - understanding what is wanted and producing working, maintainable code that delights its users.

This classic title is regularly on β€œTop Ten” lists, and many companies issue it to new hires.

14. Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/0oPPGKlΒ 

A fantastic book on how you can make the design of your software match your mental model of the problem domain you are addressing.

It’s all about code organization, modeling, and understanding / matching the business domain.

15. Working Effectively with Legacy Code πŸ“š

https://a.co/d/i5hsqc8

  • Is your code easy to change?

  • Can you get fast feedback when you do change it?

  • Do you understand it?

If not, you have legacy code.

This book offers start-to-finish strategies for working with large, untested legacy code bases.

16. You Don’t Know Js πŸ“š

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to Level Up Software Engineering πŸš€ to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
Β© 2025 Caleb Mellas
Privacy βˆ™ Terms βˆ™ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More