I often see people on HN recommend the book, Designing Data-Intensive Applications (2017). I've personally been chewing on the material for a while now, gaining new insights.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes! DDIA is amazing. It is _the_ premier reference manual, as far as my brain and I are concerned. It's the only "computer book" I keep next to my computer. (Not that I reference it frequently enough to justify its proximity; it's mostly so I can tell people "DDIA is the only 'computer book' I keep next to my computer." But still... it's great.)
Turns out I am a fool who let his enthusiasm get in the way of being right. I have DDIA on my Kindle. Next to my computer is a book that obviously makes much more sense to be next to my computer, Systems Performance: Enterprise and the Cloud (SPEC) by Brendan Gregg.
Still, DDIA is an incredible resource. But the Kindle is actually better for my usage pattern. I wish I had SPEC on Kindle.
Here's the table of contents: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/designing-data-intensiv...
It seems to cover roughly the same areas and range as the book you mentioned, Database Systems: The Complete Book (2008). http://infolab.stanford.edu/~ullman/dscb.html