I refer to my questions
"Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it."
Exactly how do those questions match this description? I'm not asking for a recommendation, nor asking you to find them. They are there, I already identified the specific items I'm asking about.
I am describing my problem in there: It's not "which one do you THINK would be better for me?" It is "what do you know about the contents of these books?" I'm asking for factual information there. I want to know those information before I decide - on my own, not from others' opinions - which option to choose.
My preferred way of learning is through text, and I prefer the academic style of textbooks which give good coverage of all areas of a domain or all features of a language: Not just for what my immediate job or project needs but also to be aware of the whole. I don't "pick something to do and see what you don't know while doing it", I prefer to complement the book with a project, and put it to practice applying each thing I learn from the book in a non-toy problem. Basically, I learn through books.
So, I'm going to be asking a lot of questions about books I find, and I'm not looking for opinions either. I can go to Amazon for reviews. But I want to know facts about their contents from people who have already read them before I decide for myself what to get.
So please, tell me how I am supposed to modify my current and future questions to be "on-topic", because from my point of view the reason given doesn't match my questions at all. What am I not seeing? And if this forum isn't ever going to entertain such questions whether they are opinion questions or not, then pray tell, where should I go to ask them? Stackoverflow is the only web resource I know of for software development. I don't want to use Google to find other places: Google doesn't review or recommend communities.
Which book should I be using?
That's not a question that can be objectively answered. It's asking for opinions, flat out.