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http -> https (the question was bumped anyway)
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Martin Sleziak
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I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.

I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.

I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.

broken link fixed, cf. https://meta.mathoverflow.net/q/5301/70594
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Glorfindel
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I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program""An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma""The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.

I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.

I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.

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I would like to read a comprehensive, step-by-step introduction to the Langlands Programme written for non-experts. An Introduction to the Langlands Program (edited by Joseph Bernstein and Stephen Gelbart) is good, but it is a collection of articles, not a textbook or monograph. Stephen Gelbart's "An Elementary Introduction to the Langlands Program" (Bulletin of the AMS, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1984, pp. 177-219) has the right approach, but while quite long, is not a book-length treatment. David Nadler's excellent new article "The Geometric Nature of the Fundamental Lemma" is another example of the sort of expository approach I would like to see in a full-length book about the Langlands Programme.