Some Lisp books have been "translated" to Clojure. 

http://juliangamble.com/blog/2012/07/13/amazing-lisp-books-living-again-in-clojure/

On Thursday, March 20, 2014 11:23:10 PM UTC-7, Marcus Blankenship wrote:

> Cool, thanks to all who've replied thus far. 
>
> Question: is there any value in traditional lisp / scheme texts, like 
> SICP, or Little Schemer (etc) or other books like that?  I've spent quite a 
> bit of time with them, imagining they would pay off, but I'm not sure 
> that's a "normal" route to Clojure proficiency. 
>
> Sent from my iPhone 
>
> > On Mar 20, 2014, at 11:12 PM, Sean Corfield 
> > <se...@corfield.org<javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
> > 
> >> On Mar 20, 2014, at 6:08 PM, Marcus Blankenship 
> >> <mar...@creoagency.com<javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
> >> So I'm curious: how did you learn Clojure well enough to be proficient 
> with it, or how are you working on learning it? 
> > 
> > Initial dabbling: The Joy of Clojure and a REPL. Caveat: it's not really 
> an introductory Clojure book but I had past FP experience so I felt I could 
> "jump in". 
> > 
> > Initial serious learning: Attended Amit Rathore's Clojure Bootcamp - one 
> day course for about $300 (if I remember correctly?). 
> > 
> > Follow-on: 4clojure.com, worked through Clojure in Action as well. 
> > 
> > Then I picked a handful of small-ish problems we'd already solved at 
> work in other languages and re-coded them in Clojure. 
> > 
> > Since then it's been a steady stream of tackling increasingly larger 
> problems at work, over a period of about three years. 
> > 
> >> Anyone else facing the focus + fear dilemma? 
> > 
> > There's a lot less fear if you're used to learning new languages. I try 
> to pick up a new language every year or two: Groovy in 2008/2009, Scala in 
> 2009/2010, Clojure in 2010/2011 (and onward). Dabbled in Ruby, Python, 
> Haskell since then but nothing serious. Very interested in Elm right now. 
> > 
> > As for focus, yes, you really do need a "project". Either pick things 
> you've done before in other languages, or figure out something that would 
> scratch an itch (a small web app, perhaps?) and tackle that. 
> > 
> > Sean Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN 
> > An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/ 
> > 
> > "Perfection is the enemy of the good." 
> > -- Gustave Flaubert, French realist novelist (1821-1880) 
> > 
> > 
> > 
>

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