Actually, in regards to @shailesh_srk's comment about a OS to develop on, I've found Windows to be very kind to Rails development. Much easier to set up than Linux and the limited Mac experience I've had. (Thanks to Engineyard's installer)
And there is a free version of IntelliJ that is open source (but it is only for Java development)
I use RubyMine for extended Ruby work and Sublime for quick edits.
Rails 3 in Action by Ryan Bigg and Yehuda Katz is a good book. They cover testing in the second chapter which most Rails books don't cover until later. I like that.
I also started reading "Learning Rails 3" which came out today. It's by Simon St. Laurent. I learned Rails from his previous edition of the book but I've gotten rusty since then.
And, even though everyone will say it, and I hate to "jump on the band wagon", but RailsCasts from Ryan Bates is a treasure of knowledge
Yeah, the books do skip details. I find myself stopping when they talk about something and go researching it. Like digging into the documentation of Bundler or Thor
I can't say the second book because I've only started reading it today. I've only skimmed the introduction. I'll dig into it tonight once I get home from work.
The Action book is pretty detailed. They cover app features you are more likely to use like sending email, authorization, making an API, deployment and such