Not that I'm aware ofAre you paying the monthly fee?
Echoing those thoughts, I always cringe when someone asks for the "Best" anything, not just training.This is going to be a slightly variant answer. There ARE no best books that anyone can name. (Before you lose hope, stay with me.) There are books that you can understand easily and there are books that somehow don't "connect" with you. You can go to a book store and look for programming books in any language. If it is a big store, you might find several titles. The acid test is to read a couple of sample sections to see if the author can connect with you; if the lessons make sense to you. It is always the case that a book one person likes, another will hate. Every person has their likes and dislikes in lots of things - and "textbook style" happens to be one of those things.
Echoing those thoughts, I always cringe when someone asks for the "Best" anything, not just training.
Most such choices are more subjective than objective. One person's cup of tea, so to speak, is another's three day old cold cup of coffee. It's wet and it might quench your thirst, but you might not consider one or the other the "best".
Sample a wide variety of options and modalities: Books, courses and classes, YouTube and other videos. There's so much available these days, you are bound to find something that suits you.