Compute 'S Atari ST Reference Books – By Paul Lefebvre

rbanffy1 pts0 comments

Compute!'s Atari ST Reference Books - by Paul Lefebvre

Goto 10: Retro Computing & Gaming

SubscribeSign in

Compute!'s Atari ST Reference Books

Paul Lefebvre<br>Jun 11, 2026<br>∙ Paid

10

Share

In the late 70s to late 80s, Compute! magazine was a great source of computing information. In my case, it was often the way I learned about computers other than Atari systems. I also really liked their short-lived Atari ST magazine and even have some Compute!’s Gazette issues lying around here.<br>In addition to their wonderful magazines, Compute! also published books. The Compute! books for the Atari 8-bit series, such as Mapping the Atari and the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Books of Atari, are highly regarded.<br>Compute!’s first Atari ST book was Compute!’s ST Programmer’s Guide. Released in 1986, it was not highly regarded. It only covers BASIC and Logo with a rudimentary overview of GEM and TOS. ST information was scarce at the time, so it was probably better than nothing, but I think most people stuck with the Abacus books that were also available.<br>Computes St Programmers Guide<br>19.1MB ∙ PDF file

Download<br>Download

However, in 1987 Compute! released their Atari ST Technical Reference Guide series, which consisted of three books covering VDI, AES and TOS. Written by Sheldon Leemon, who was relatively well-known in the Commodore and Atari world at the time, these books were excellent and a tremendous improvement over the Abacus ST reference books.<br>The rest of this article is for paid subscribers. For a taste of Goto 10, check out these free articles at the Goto 10 web site.

Subscribe

Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of Paul Lefebvre.<br>Claim my free post<br>Or purchase a paid subscription.

Previous

© 2026 Paul Lefebvre · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice<br>Start your SubstackGet the app

Substack is the home for great culture

This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please turn on JavaScript or unblock scripts

atari compute books reference paul lefebvre

Related Articles