I broke up my list into cultural (that is, about the people, history, etc), popular (that is, not aimed at a student or an expert), and texts.<p>CULTURAL<p>Einstein - Essays in Humanism<p>Frayn - Copenhagen<p>Feynman - Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!<p>Feynman - What Do You Care What Other People Think?<p>de Grasse Tyson - Death by Black Hole<p>Hoffman - The Man Who Loved Only Numbers<p>Kaiser - Drawing Theories Apart<p>Kaiser - How the Hippied Saved Physics<p>Macaulay - The Way Things Work<p>Paulos - Innumeracy<p>Sagan - Cosmos<p>Sagan - Broca's Brain<p>Sagan - The Demon-Haunted World<p>Salam - Science in the Third World<p>Seife - Zero<p>Weisskopf - The Joy of Insight<p>POPULAR<p>Deutsch - The Beginning of Infinity (especially his explanation about fungibility in quantum mechanics)<p>Feynman - The Meaning of It All<p>Feynman - Lectures on Physics<p>Feynman and Weinberg - Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics<p>Galison - Einstein's Clocks, Poincaré's Maps<p>Gamow - One, Two, Three... Infinity<p>Hadamard - Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field<p>Hawking - A Brief History of Time<p>Hofstadter - Gödel Escher Bach<p>Heisenberg - Physics and Philosophy: The Revolution in Modern Science<p>Polya - How to Solve It<p>Schrödinger - What is Life?<p>Susskind - The Theoretical Minimum<p>Susskind - Quantum Mechanics<p>Wallace - Everything And More<p>Weinberg - The First Three Minutes<p>Wiener - God & Golem, Inc.<p>TEXTS<p>Aaronson - Quantum Computing with Democritus (but I don't have a version with me in the acknowledgements <a href="https://books.google.com/books?id=jRGfhSoFx0oC&lpg=PR31&ots=PCRKMZ9sg_&dq=evan+berkowitz+democritus+aaronson&pg=PR31&hl=en#v=onepage&q=evan%20berkowitz%20democritus%20aaronson&f=false" rel="nofollow">https://books.google.com/books?id=jRGfhSoFx0oC&lpg=PR31&ots=...</a> )<p>Abelson and Sussman - SICP<p>Abrikosov, Gorkov, and Dzyaloshinski - Methods of Quantum Field Theory in Statistical Physics<p>Cohen-Tannoudji - Quantum Mechanics (1+2)<p>Dirac - Lectures on Quantum Mechanics<p>Eddington - Space, Time, and Gravitation<p>Feynman - Feynman's Thesis<p>Feynman and Hibbs - Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals<p>Fermi - Thermodynamics<p>Gattringer & Lang - Quantum Chromodynamics on the Lattice<p>Goldstein - Classical Mechanics (the old version, NOT with Poole and Safko)<p>Griffiths - Introduction to Electrodynamics<p>Griffiths - Introduction to Quantum Mechanics<p>Jackson - Classical Electrodynamics (2nd edition---the last one entirely in CGS---is preferable)<p>Kleppner and Kolenkow - An Introduction to Mechanics<p>Landau and Lifshitz - any book in this series<p>Nielsen and Chuang - Quantum Computation and Quantum Information<p>Pauli - Selected Topics in Field Quantization<p>Peskin & Schroeder - An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory<p>Purcell - Electricity and Magnetism<p>Ryden - Introduction to Cosmology<p>Sakurai - Modern Quantum Mechanics (up to chapter 5, after which Sakurai dies and the editors put his notes together)<p>Sussman and Wisdom - Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics<p>Sipser - Introduction to the Theory of Computation<p>Thorne - Black Holes & Time Warps<p>Thouless - The Quantum Mechanics of Many-Body Systems<p>Weinberg - The Quantum Theory of Fields I, II, and III<p>Zee - Quantum Field Theory in a Nutshell