These are the books which we recommend.
Tabular Modelling
Data Mining
Statistics & Probability
- Quick way to catch up on statistics, not scary and actually a pleasant read: Statistics in a Nutshell by Sarah Boslaugh & Paul Andrew Watters,
- or a more hands-on but not so fast to read Introductory Statistics with R by Peter Dalgaard,
- both of the above should get you ready to start using the advanced and powerful open source statistics package R (download software from here), to which a nice guide is R in a Nutshell by Joseph Adler,
- and if learning probability is your objective, go with Probability: A Graduate Course by Allan Gut, though it is a pretty serious textbook for the academically minded.
Big Data
Data Warehousing
- The Microsoft Data Warehouse Toolkit: With SQL Server 2008 R2 and the Microsoft Business Intelligence Toolset by Joy Mundy, Warren Thornthwaite and the famous Ralph Kimball, who fathered a major data warehousing approach. Ralph is perhaps better know that the other father of DW, Bill Inmon, considered perhaps, however, to be the first one to have started this way of organising analytical data,
- or The Data Warehouse Lifecycle Toolkit, by Ralph Kimball and other authors, which is more about the methodology and the processes of building a traditional Enterprise Data Warehouse, which became the DW building best practice.