I remember geeking out about this when I first stumbled upon 'The Feynman Lectures' in my university library. The original publisher was Addison-Wesley, back in the early 1960s. These lectures are legendary—Richard Feynman basically reinvented how physics could be taught, with that wild mix of clarity and chaos only he could pull off. What’s crazy is how they weren’t even meant for publication initially; they were just his Caltech undergrad lectures, recorded and transcribed. But the demand was so huge, Addison-Wesley stepped in to immortalize them. It’s like capturing lightning in a bottle—you can still feel Feynman’s energy crackling through those pages decades later.
The coolest part? These books weren’t polished corporate products. They kept Feynman’s rambles, his doodles, even his occasional frustrations with students. That raw authenticity is why they still crush modern textbooks in popularity. I’ve lost count of how many physicists cite these as their gateway drug into real physics. The original red hardcovers are collector’s items now, but later editions kept the soul intact. Funny how something born from chalkdust and tape recorders became the holy grail of physics education.
Addison-Wesley put out the first edition in 1964, and it’s still the gold standard for physics writing. Feynman’s voice jumps off the page—he makes quantum mechanics feel like a street magic show. The lectures were never supposed to be a book, but thank god someone had the sense to hit 'record.' Those original volumes are like catching Einstein if he’d hosted a podcast. No fancy graphics, just one genius thinking out loud with chalk in hand.
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“What did I promise would happen if you threw another punch, Artemis?” Professor Lucian's silky tone hardened into a dark fascinating baritone.
“Let me see…” Artemis licked his lips with a menacing smile, his cold dark eyes piercing through the professor's oceanic ones. “You said you'll bring me to my knees but something tells me I'll do more than just begging.”
The air in the room shifted as the older man took a step closer.
“Hit me, Artemis,” Lucian took another step closer. “Every second you hesitate, your punishment doubles.”
Artemis lips curled in a smirk as he stepped closer. He raised his hand slowly to the professor's lips but the older man caught it before it could make contact.
An amused chuckle rumbled in his chest.
“Twenty seconds gone, Professor. You better punish me hard,” he smirked.
*******
Artemis McAlester was feared for two reasons. His ability to break anything and his power to own everything. Kingston College was his playground until a red-haired professor with oceanic blue eyes and a dangerous intolerance for spoiled bullies.
Not only did Lucian defy every rule he set, but he was also the one thing Artemis couldn’t own. And that defiance? It was the sexiest thing of all.
Except Lucian wasn't someone he could break. To own the blue-eyed professor, Artemis would have to do the unthinkable. Submit. Break. Let himself be owned.
As long as the only thing between them was desire and pure unadulterated hate.
She spent three years faking moans for a boyfriend who never made her come. One night, one stranger in a mask, and she finally learns what it means to be wrecked against a wall.
But when the mask comes off?
He’s her professor.
And he’s not done teaching her.
"I don't play games, Miss Moretti. I end them."
Celine Moretti has a plan after catching her boyfriend with the new beautiful transfer student. It’s simple, really.
Step one: Don't cry. Get even. Step two: Seduce the transfer student’s uncle—the icy, terrifyingly handsome Professor Reed—and destroy his niece’s perfect little life.
It was supposed to be a game. A little revenge to soothe a broken heart. Celine thought she was the player. She thought Professor Reed was just a target, a rigid academic with a god complex and a stick up his ass.
She was wrong.
Professor Reed isn't just a teacher. He is Caelum Morano, the ruthlessly efficient Don of the Morano Crime Family. A man who hides in the halls of academia to hunt the shadow organization that butchered his fiancée. He has spent years perfecting his mask of indifference, living a life of cold solitude, surrounded by a loving but dangerous family he keeps at arm's length.
Until Celine walks in. She is chaos in red lipstick. She is defiance wrapped in a short skirt. And she looks exactly like the ghost haunting his dreams.
He tries to reject her. He tries to scare her away. "You’re playing with fire, little star," Caelum warned, his hand closing around her throat, not tight enough to hurt, but firm enough to own. "And I burned down the world a long time ago."
"Then burn me," Celine whispered, trembling not with fear, but with a dark, twisted need. "I’d rather burn with you than freeze alone."
Maya Greenley has always been a hopeless romantic, or at least that's what her best friends tell her. Between acing her classes and preparing for post-grad school, Maya doesn't have time for 'romance'.
That is until she sees Alexander Grey, a mysterious but swoon-worthy man with dark eyes and a wickedly charming smile. Maya knows she shouldn't feel anything toward him, it was wrong, forbidden even and he was absolutely off-limits.
And it was because the charming man is not only years older than Maya,
He's also her Psychology professor.
On my eighteenth birthday, a mouthwatering scent filled my nostrils and I was shocked when I saw the professor I hated the most was my mate.
Returning home, my stepmom said she was going to introduce to me her new husband which shocked me. My father was disabled from a brutal illness yet she wanted to marry another man. When he came in, he turned out to be him. My Mate and My Professor.
Sloane Mercer has made it her mission to test every limit Professor Dalton Avery sets. Sharp-tongued, fearless, and irresistibly defiant. She turns his lectures into a battlefield of wit and willpower.
Dalton prides himself on control. Of his classroom, of his reputation, and especially of his desires. But when Sloane pushes one time too many, the tension between them finally ignites.
What begins as a battle for dominance becomes something far more dangerous. An illicit affair burning with passion, power, and the threat of exposure. The closer Dalton gets to losing himself to her, the more he realizes he never had control at all.
I remember picking up 'The Feynman Lectures' during my undergrad years and being blown away by how approachable physics could be. The series consists of three main volumes, covering mechanics, electromagnetism, and quantum mechanics. Each book is a treasure trove of insights, with Feynman's signature clarity and humor shining through. I particularly love Volume II for its deep dive into electromagnetism—it made Maxwell's equations feel less intimidating. The lectures were originally delivered at Caltech in the 1960s, and the books preserve that conversational style, making them timeless. If you're into physics, these are must-reads, though they do require some dedication.