Amazon has a 3 book kindle edition for free right now (you can use an app on mobile or your PC as well). I "purchased" it but haven't looked through it yet.
https://www.amazon.com/Python-Manuscripts-Programming-Beginners-Intermediates-ebook/dp/B07CQPHC1N/
Today I stumbled upon a free Kindle Python book set from Amazon here. Maybe it might interest you?
Jay has gotten his cluster to come together.
But new challenges always appear.
Most frustrating is an old crush from Earth joins them and throws questions
into all of Jay's relationships.
One truth remains. Their only hope is to grow stronger.
To do that they have to descend deeper into the dungeon.
At the same time, Jay has to decide how he feels about the women in his life.
Warning: this book contains detailed adult activities and unconventional relationships.
David Wild's Cheminformatics book has interesting examples and questions that might give you something to go on. I took his class a few years ago and one of the projects had to do with creating a predictive model for toxicity given the chemical structure of the substance. https://www.amazon.com/Introducing-Cheminformatics-David-Wild-ebook/dp/B00G5TS7B4
Oh, and here, if you want more detail on why you’re wrong, it’s in this book:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000TU6IKC/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glc_IMp3FbCFBN70Y
And this one:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000V6J1GM/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glc_DNp3FbTP5X67E
No, I can’t offer details on what they say- my argument is: the entire book(s). You just have to buy them, and read them, and tell me why they’re wrong.
Let me know when you’ve done that! 😂
Definitely, I know lots of pharma companies are looking for data scientists. I'd highly recommend David Wild's Cheminformatics book as a starting point. There used to be a MOOC for his i571 course on cheminformatics, but it looks like that's gone. I took a course of his called Data Science for Drug Discovery, but I had way too little chemistry basis to get enough out of it (e.g. how do you "remove salts" from a chemical structure before doing analysis???)
I'd suggest you reach out to him at Indiana University, he's a great guy and may be able to help you network in this space.