as i think about it, it seems to me that 'practical clojure' should be
updated but stay minimal. This means strictly keep the focus on the
core of clojure, correct errors, add a few missing things (add more
info on destructuring for instance), add and update things that come
new or changed with clojure-1.3, clojure-1.4.

in addition there could be a separate book 'professional clojure' that
focuses on extensions and advanced topics of the clojure cosmos:
clojurescript, monads, continuations, building dsl, core.logic, ring,
korma, noir  ... this could be a great selling book IMO. it is the
book david nolan, jim duey, chris granger ... would probably love to
review.

oreillys upcoming book 'programming clojure' tries to sum up the 2
books in one.  buy it and draw your own clonclusions ;-)

i like strictly focused, minimal books and i have a desire for that
imaginary second book 'professional clojure'.

have a nice time

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