| I have some recommendations for you as an EE graduate, you can club Digital Circuits and Systems, Embedded Systems and Digital Hardware with one book in one continuous course with the book Digital Design and Computer Architecture by Harris and Harris (A RISC V Edition will release soon in 2-3 months, buy that one) For Electronic circuits choose Microelectronics by Behzad Razavi. Instead of Purcell go for "Engineering Electromagnetics with Ida", it is more intuitive. And th first book you should start with is "Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits" Then you go for DDCA and Ida in parallel. The list does give me head scrather, this is too broad to be ever accomplished. My recommendation to redo the list is first find out what piques your interest in EE, Digital hardware, analog hardware or control systems or embedded systems and try to have a self study focus in that concentration. The way I see it with this plan you are setting yourself up for failure. Edit:Removed the ditching recommendation as I see it relevant to OP's goals. |
I Horowitz and Hill is a LOUSY textbook. And, personally, I find its usefulness as a cookbook overrated.
Going through the Forrest Mims notebooks/cookbooks/etc. for a solution to your problem is generally a way better idea than Horowitz and Hill. The Mims stuff does a really good job of pointing out the pitfalls you're likely to hit as well as the basic pedagogy.