Depends. A real life person can help you determine what to prioritize learning (what resources to look at first, which parts of which resources to pay the most attention to) in a way that books generally don't. Also, in several subjects, the best resources are not necessarily books.
I think you misread my comment. I was also saying asking a person can be better than reading a book.
Checklists are powerful, and I don't use them enough. You probably don't, either.
Below are some of my own checklists. Please share your own!
I don't know how to do X.
I don't understand X.
I feel mentally exhausted but can't afford to sleep right now.
I don't want to get out of bed, but I should.
I'm procrastinating on task X.
I'm about to send an email / post a comment of some significance.
(I don't do these ones nearly enough! D'oh!)
I feel sad about not doing a better job at X.
I'm about to make a decision of some significance.
I could go on, but... what are yours? (Now is also a good opportunity to make some checklists for yourself, based on what you think tends to work for you.)