At MentorCruise, we are all about making the most out of the experience of others. As part of that, we have connected and asked dozens of experts and professionals about their favourite DevOps books – and here are the answers.
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The best DevOps books in 2026 are the ones working professionals actually recommend, not algorithmic picks. This list is curated from the bookshelves of DevOps mentors on MentorCruise – every title vouched for by someone in the field. Browse the full book library or read on for our 2026 picks.
Understanding the concepts of DevOps starts with understanding the fundamentals. On your way to mastery, it's crucial for you to understand how certain concepts were derived, and why things work like they do. Starting with these resources is the best way to do so.
This is not a DevOps book specifically, but it is very useful because DevOps work is shaped by architectural tradeoffs. It helps you understand distributed systems, coupling, deployment implications, and design decisions that affect operability, scalability, and team workflows.
Recommended by the experts and mentors at MentorCruise.
Release It! is about building software that survives real production traffic, failures, and ugly edge cases. It is especially useful for DevOps learners who want to connect application design with operations, resilience, and deployment safety.
Recommended by the experts and mentors at MentorCruise.
This is one of the core DevOps books, focused on how teams improve flow, reliability, deployment practices, security, and operations together. Pick it up if you want a practical map of CI/CD, incident handling, platform thinking, and the cultural side of DevOps, not just tools.
Recommended by the experts and mentors at MentorCruise.
PowerShell is still a very practical automation tool, especially in mixed Windows environments, and this book is a well-known beginner-friendly guide. Pick it if your DevOps path includes scripting, system administration, or cloud automation across Windows, Linux, and macOS.
Recommended by the experts and mentors at MentorCruise.
Terraform: Up and Running is one of the most commonly recommended books for learning infrastructure as code. It gives you a hands-on path into provisioning cloud infrastructure reproducibly, which is a core DevOps skill for automation and environment management.
Recommended by the experts and mentors at MentorCruise.
This is the classic SRE book from Google, and it goes deep on running reliable production systems at scale. DevOps learners should read it to understand SLIs, SLOs, error budgets, incident response, and the operational mindset behind modern platform work.
Recommended by the experts and mentors at MentorCruise.
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A DevOps book that helped someone three years in won't necessarily help someone two months in. Pick by where you are, not by what's trending.
Identify the specific DevOps problem in front of you this month – a stuck project, a missing fundamental, a decision you keep second-guessing. Then pick the book that maps to it. Books read in response to a real question stick. Books read in general don't.
If a DevOps book has been on mentor recommendation lists for five years, it survived the parts of DevOps that actually changed. Newer titles are useful for tools and tactics. Older ones tend to be where the durable thinking lives.
Foundational reads if you're new to DevOps. Applied case studies and patterns once you've shipped real work. Frameworks for leading teams once you're managing other DevOps people. The same book recommended at the wrong stage just becomes noise.
The hardest part of getting good at DevOps isn't finding the right book – it's translating what you read into how you actually work. Most readers forget around 80% of what they read within a few weeks. The ones who don't are the ones who picked one specific idea per book and tried it on real work the next day.
That's where a DevOps mentor closes the loop. A book can give you a framework. A mentor reads your real work and tells you where the gap is between what you think you're doing and what you're actually doing – the thing a book, by design, can't do.
Common questions about choosing and learning from DevOps books in 2026.
The best DevOps books for beginners cover the fundamentals before specialization. Start with the Fundamentals section on this page – those are the titles mentors most often hand to people who are new to DevOps. Once you've worked through one or two, the Additional Reading and Specializations sections will deepen your knowledge.
Two or three carefully chosen DevOps books, read closely and applied as you go, will take you further than a stack of ten skimmed. We recommend one fundamentals book to build your mental model, one practical book to ground it in real work, and one advanced book once you've shipped something.
Yes. Tools and frameworks change quickly, but the underlying principles of DevOps – the mental models, trade-offs and judgement calls – move much more slowly. The books on this list focus on durable thinking, not version numbers, which is why mentors still recommend them in 2026.
You can get a long way on your own with the right books and projects, but most people hit a ceiling where a book can't tell you whether the choice you're about to make is reasonable for your specific situation. That's where a DevOps mentor speeds things up – they look at your real work and tell you what a book can't.
Every book on this page is recommended by working DevOps professionals on MentorCruise or curated by our editorial team from titles mentors consistently bring up. We re-check the list periodically and rotate in newer titles when the field moves – the 2026 edition reflects that.
Most DevOps books cost $15 to $30 new, $10 to $15 as ebooks, and nothing if you borrow them from a local library. If you're working through several titles, a library hold list is the cheapest way to triage which ones are worth buying. The cost ceiling for a year of reading is well under the cost of one industry conference.
Three reasons usually: passive reading without notes, no system for picking one idea to actually try at work, and no one giving feedback on whether the attempt worked. Books on their own are an input. Without a practice loop and someone checking your work, what you read fades within weeks – which is what working with a DevOps mentor fixes.
Four to six DevOps books read closely and applied to your real work will outperform twenty skimmed. Career growth comes from the application, not the page count. Pair each book with one concrete experiment at work and one conversation with someone who already knows the material.
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