That camp is occupied almost entirely by Donald Thomas’ book, Logic Design and Verification Using SystemVerilog (Revised) .
Additionally, the revised edition is still light on (Xilinx/Altera specific). This is a textbook for ASIC methodology, but 90% applies directly to high-end FPGAs. The Verdict: Buy it. Read it. Dog-ear it. If you are an early-career digital designer, Logic Design and Verification Using SystemVerilog (Revised) will cut your debug time in half. If you are a verification engineer, it will make you a better designer because you will finally understand why RTL engineers write "bad" code (and how to fix it). That camp is occupied almost entirely by Donald
9.5/10 (Deducted half a point because the index could be more thorough). The Verdict: Buy it
Beyond the Schematic: Why Donald Thomas’ “Logic Design and Verification Using SystemVerilog” is a Modern Classic If you are an early-career digital designer, Logic
Absolute beginners who have never written an if statement in hardware. You need a basic Verilog primer first (like Ashenden’s Digital Design ). A Minor Critique (Nothing is perfect) The book assumes a level of academic patience. Thomas writes like a professor (he is one, at Carnegie Mellon legacy). The examples are lean—sometimes too lean. He avoids the "kitchen sink" examples that bloated other textbooks, but occasionally you wish he had drawn the waveform diagram for a particularly tricky race condition.
Donald Thomas has written the book that sits between Digital Design 101 and UVM Reference Manual . It is the missing link.