This might be just a personal thing from my years of using binoculars, but my favorite book is still
Binocular Astronomy by Craig Crossen and Will Tirion.
What I've always really loved about it is that it takes you through the sky bit by bit, and explains everything to you not only in great detail but also in a way that is interesting. It has chapters about galaxy structure, and how what you can see through your binoculars is related to the galaxy as a whole. It just blows my mind when they start talking about star associations between different constellations, and how they know there associated because of the direction they are travelling through space.
I can't put what I mean into words very well, but when I read Crossen's descriptions and have a think and a bit of a look through the bino's I start to feel a three dimensional picture of the galaxy and the universe building in my head, instead of just LOOKING at it I feel PART of it
It does have a northern hemisphere bias but it covers enough of the southern hemisphere to be worth buying IMO. It also has Will Tirion's bright star atlas included, as well as stacks of more detailed finder charts.
I'd really love it if anyone knows of a book for the southern skies that covers this kind of stuff at a level suitable for my 8" dob too
and ditto on collins star & planets book, and the double sided laminated moon and star charts from Australian Geographic, I have them too and they are great