Ignition! An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants by John Drury Clark and published in 1972 is an interesting bit of history.
The only reason I know who Clark is because of his association with Isaac Asimov. The two of them worked together during WW II. Later on, Clark was directly responsible for the formation of the Trapdoor Spider Club, which inspired Asimov's Black Widower stories. In fact, the Trapdoor Spiders formed because Pratt Fletcher couldn't get along with Clark's wife so he formed a social club so he could still hang out with Clark. (To make matters even more like a soap opera, Clark divorced and married the woman Pratt had been married to when the club formed) Clark is specifically the inspiration for James Drake.
While Clark did write a couple of science fiction stories, his most famous work of writing for non-scientists is Ignition. When I started looking at the Trapdoor Spider members I hadn't heard of, that rabbit hole took me to Ignition and it was too fascinating a work to not read.
Clark does lightly touch on the chemistry that is the point of the book, the book is really as collection of anecdotes about the research. It is pretty much an oral history of the development of rocket fuel up through the 1960s. Clark was in the thick of it so he got to hear a lot of what happened. (There are some things he specifically mentions were classified and he couldn't discuss) The chemistry pretty much went over my head but the stories kept me going.
Above all else, the book is entertaining. Clark clearly was a story teller and he also had a snarky, black sense of humor. He is discussing the development of extremely volatile chemicals during the Cold War. Explosions, massive property damage and death were a part of that and he addresses them with a lot of gallows humor. A particularly dark comment that stuck with me was that they only had to make a limited amount of ICBM fuel because everyone would be dead if they ever got used so they didn't have to make enough for a second round. (The real point was they could be picky with how they developed ICBM fuel but the argument definitely sticks with you)
Ignition also made me think about how much technological development I take for granted. Ignition isn't about the engineering involved in rocket development, which is what you usually hear about if you look at the history of rockets. It's about the chemistry involved. It's about a very specific part of the rocket development, albeit an absolutely essential part. It describes decades of research that I'm sure is still going on, as well as vast amounts of effort and money. You couldn't just pump diesel into a rocket and watch it go. (I was embarrassed at realizing I never thought about how oxidation would have to be part of the chemical reaction to make rocket fuel work when it's so obvious that that would be essential. A big chunk of the book in fact discusses oxidizers)
The book is more than fifty years old. As I've said, much of the development that is described must have been superseded by now. However, it's good to know what we had to do in order to get to where we've gotten. It is also a good look at technological development that was driven by the Cold War. (Or was it the first Cold War?) Clark wrote an book that is pretty darn entertaining but it is insightful as well.