Who This Author Is

J. R. Hubbard has enough depth here to be more than a raw catalog rollup. This page pulls together 3 catalog-linked books across 1998 to 2000, which makes it easier to separate the strongest starting points from the noisier editions. The clearest lane here leans toward Young Readers & Series Fiction.

Best for readers who want approachable series fiction and books that are easy to hand to newer or younger readers. If you want the easiest first click, start with Theory and Problems of Data Structures with C++ (Schaum's Outline Series) 1/e and branch outward from there. UPB note: the strongest documented run here lands between 1998 to 2000; the most common copies on this page tend to come from McGraw-Hill.

Best Place To Start

Author At A Glance

Best known for: Young Readers & Series Fiction entry points • common used copies from McGraw-Hill

Genres and themes: Young Readers & Series Fiction

Who this author is best for: readers who want approachable series fiction and books that are easy to hand to newer or younger readers

UPB note: the strongest documented run here lands between 1998 to 2000; the most common copies on this page tend to come from McGraw-Hill.

Top Books To Start With

  1. Theory and Problems of Data Structures with C++ (Schaum's Outline Series) 1/e

    McGraw-Hill • 2000 • longer commitment

    UPB note: one of the most common used-copy publishers for this author • year signal: 2000 • 407 pages.

  2. Schaum's Outline of Fundamentals of Computing with C++

    McGraw-Hill • 1998 • longer commitment

    UPB note: one of the most common used-copy publishers for this author • year signal: 1998 • 356 pages.

  3. Schaum's Outlines of Programming with Java

    McGraw-Hill • 1998 • standard commitment

    UPB note: one of the most common used-copy publishers for this author • year signal: 1998 • 257 pages.

How The Picks Compare