Guys,
Obviously those are very advanced topics and there is very few people in this world who really understand it. Many can manipulate the mathematics of it, but a clear understanding if difficult.
If you are genuinely interested in this stuff, there is a wonderfull little book written by R.P.Feynman. He was not only one of the greatest physicists ever, but also a great teacher. His very unique skill was the ability to teach complex things and explain them in a way that anyone can understand.
The book is titled "QED. A Strange theory of light and matter". It's a pretty small book and it explains a plethora of phemomena. From light reflection, refraction, diffraction and interference, throught the optics of a lens, to the elementary particles, quarks and Quantum Chromo Dynamics (QCD).
All that using a single "recipe" of QED. Even Pauli's exclusion principle and Heisenberg's uncertaintity principle cease to be an arbitrary, capricious weird and unintuitive laws, they simply follow as a consequence of QED principles.
What is most amazing though, is that the book is written in such a way that almost anyone can comprehend it, and after reading it being struck with ...
"Of course, why didn't I discover it. It was in plain sight".
Another entry level books
"The fourth dimension" - Rudy Rucker (not really physics, but a great introdunction to n-dimensional thinking)
"In search of Schodinger's Cat" - John Gribbin.