Help identifying books of note

My opinion only guys but I fail to see a single book in the lot that I either don’t already have or would like to get by the time I retire. As a hobby machinist (kindergarten level) I would think of that pic as a “best of” or “gold standard” reference library with only Moores “Holes, Contours and Surfaces” and Connely s “Machine Tool Reconditioning” the only two notable titles missing. Grab the lot if you can and if you don’t want them set us up!


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Another vote for take it all. From the ones I recognize it looks like a good selection.
 
I prefer books to watching long-winded youtube videos.

And what you have are ALL the books you need.
As previously stated, I too will gladly buy the set from you...
 
Thank you all. Another guy picked some he wanted first then I got the rest. I have no idea which ones he took. I’ll go through them eventually and share any I don’t keep.
 
I have a 'library', guys ask if this or that have value. Value is mostly individual, not the monetary issue alone; how much do you want to learn?

edit 30 Jun
Coupled to that; a personal 'library' should be cataloged, an easy job in excel. I list title by subject not pronouns or adjectives; ie "The Workbook for Grinders" is alpha-listed as "Grinders, The Workbook for". A Crtl-F search for 'Grinders' will find alike words about different grinding techniques. It also combines them when additional titles are entered, then a 'A-Z' sort performed.
The listing includes author, edition, publisher and date. This applies to single or multiple individual texts. They are further broken down by whether a machine manual, reference text, etc.
 
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