A. Ben-Naim and D. Casadei, Modern Thermodynamics, World Scientific, 2016, ISBN: 978-981-3200-76-0 (no.5 among the best Thermodynamic books of all times! )
D. Casadei, Searches for Cosmic Antimatter, chapter 6 of "Frontiers in Cosmic Ray Research", Nova Publishers, 2007, ISBN: 1-59454-793-9 (arXiv: astro-ph/0405417)
Italian translation of Entropy Demystified, by Arieh Ben-Naim: L'entropia svelata. La seconda legge della termodinamica ridotta a puro buon senso, libreriauniversitaria.it, ISBN: 8862920113
The most complete database to date seems to be Google Scholar, which also provides various citation indices. Other databases are ORCID and Scopus. As of Sep 2017, my h-index is 106 with about 73k citations. This is mostly due to the papers from the ATLAS Collaboration, signed by all members as it is customary in high-energy physics. Omitting all papers to which I did not contribute either in the analysis or in the data acquisition my h-index would decrease to the level of 30-40, while taking away all collaboration paper (which would be completely unfair, as I spent 90% of my time developing detectors) my h-index becomes 11 with about 780 citations (I performed this exercise in the summer 2017 using PoP).
Apart from my papers on statistics, I'm particularly proud of my work on the missing transverse-momentum trigger of ATLAS, which has been the first implementation of this kind of trigger successfully used to select events analysed in many studies. After several years of work, I could describe it mathematically with the help of few colleagues, but sadly the results have been published without my name :-( The same math appeared also in a later paper published after I left ATLAS, so my name is not appearing there either... It's ironic that, because of the ATLAS collaboration rules, the list of my papers includes more than hundred articles that I've not even read but not the one documenting the work whose I've been the main author (if you are member of ATLAS, then you can browse the private notes and find my name there).
For a certain time, I used to keep track of my papers on my website at CERN, but it soon became too demanding to keep the pace of ATLAS publications. The old list still gives me the chance to remember about how many subjects I treated before joining ATLAS. :-)