It seems that there are two important aspects to this question: - Is it okay to cite books in answers? - When, if ever, is it okay for an author to cite his or her *own* book in an answer? **On the first part:** We tell people: ["If you can imagine an entire book that answers your question, you’re asking too much."][1] But it's often easy to see that an entire book or a chapter would help an OP, and I don't think there's anything wrong with pointing someone to a book as an additional resource, provided that the reference doesn't substitute for a useful answer to the OP's particular question. You don't have to buy a book in order to learn from it -- most communities in the US have a library, and even if the library doesn't have the book in question, it may be able to procure it for you through inter-library loan. The information in many books is also available in other ways, e.g. though paid services like [Safari][2], sometimes on free sites like [Google Books][3], and portions may be available through previews. (I was able to preview the OP's book and see [the section he referred to][4] at no charge.) **On the second part:** This comes down to motivation. You shouldn't mention your book if your goal is to *promote* it, even if it will only increase sales by 1 or 2 units. On the other hand, if you're honestly trying to add a useful resource to your answer, it doesn't matter whether you're the author or just a happy reader. That's a fine line, and it's hard for readers to judge someone else's motivation, so perhaps a more practical standard is *relevancy*. If your citation is relevant to the OP's question, then a citation is probably fine. Additionally, if you're quoting from a book directly or indirectly, you *should* cite the book whether you're the author or not. [1]: http://stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask [2]: http://www.safaribooksonline.com [3]: http://books.google.com [4]: http://my.safaribooksonline.com/book/programming/csharp/9781491906675/2dot-async-basics/recipe_async_orderbycompletion_html