This unique book explores the world of q, known technically as basic hypergeometric series, and represents the authorâs personal and life-long studyâinspired by Ramanujanâof aspects of this broad topic. While the level of mathematical sophistication is graduated, the book is designed to appeal to advanced undergraduates as well as researchers in the field. The principal aims are to demonstrate the power of the methods and the beauty of the results. The book contains novel proofs of many results in the theory of partitions and the theory of representations, as well as associated identities. Though not specifically designed as a textbook, parts of it may be presented in course work; it has many suitable exercises. After an introductory chapter, the power of q-series is demonstrated with proofs of Lagrangeâs four-squares theorem and Gaussâs two-squares theorem. Attention then turns to partitions and Ramanujanâs partition congruences. Several proofs of these are given throughout the book. Many chapters are devoted to related and other associated topics. One highlight is a simple proof of an identity of Jacobi with application to string theory. On the way, we come across the RogersâRamanujan identities and the RogersâRamanujan continued fraction, the famous âforty identitiesâ of Ramanujan, and the representation results of Jacobi, Dirichlet and Lorenz, not to mention many other interesting and beautiful results. We also meet a challenge of D.H. Lehmer to give a formula for the number of partitions of a number into four squares, prove a âmysteriousâ partition theorem of H. Farkas and prove a conjecture of R.Wm. Gosper âwhich even ErdÅs couldnât do.â The book concludes with a look at Ramanujanâs remarkable tau function.