Hugh David Young was an American physicist who taught physics for 52 years at Carnegie Mellon University. Young is best known for co-authoring the later editions of University Physics, a highly regarded introductory physics textbook, with Francis Weston Sears and Mark W. Zemansky (this book — first published in 1949 — is often referred to as "Sears and Zemansky", although Hugh Young became a coauthor in 1973).
we actually did the 14th edition but whatevs (it's not on goodreads).
I liked how the concept descriptions were in-depth while also assuming you understood prior concepts fully, but the lack of refreshers (which was, TBF, a me problem) did make me flip back chapters in this 700+ page tome and go on lengthy wild-goose chases quite often.
also, I wish there were some kind of compiling of the equations at the end of each chapter (or even the textbook). because there wasn't, I also had to go on quite a few wild-goose chases for those. I started writing them all down in my notes at the beginning of each unit so I wouldn't lose track, which did help a bunch.
to conclude: Sears & Zemansky are real ones for putting the odd-numbered problem answers at the back of the book (came in clutch when my prof gave us questions from the book as homework).