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You might start with the now quite old but groundbreaking book "Introduction to VLSI ~~design~~ Systems"[*] by Mead and Conway. It shows the chip layouts for basic switches, gates, and stuff like that, and design tools for building circuits up from those. Now imagine decades of improvements to the design tools. For the past few decades chip designs have looked like software programs, except highly parallel. The two main languages ("HDL's") are Verilog (looks like C) and VHDL (looks like Ada). You say what circuits you want and how they should be connected, and the compiler and layout software figure out how to place thst stuff on the chip. You can drop "macros" for very complex subsystems into your design, such as communication ports or even microprocessor cores, without having to worry about the insides of the macro blocks. There is a significant FOSS ecosystem of such macros too: see opencores.org for some of what's available. It's sort of like Github but for hardware.
Edit: I mis-remembered the book title, it's "Introduction to VLSI Systems" not "Design". See also:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mead%E2%80%93Conway_VLSI_chip_design_revolution
Thanks! I've been collecting old computer books from resell shops. I'll look for it.
See my edit above where I fixed the book title, which I had originally mis-remembered. It looks like the book is on archive.org:
https://archive.org/details/introductiontovl00mead/page/n1/mode/2up
Doesn't sound easy to find that way. It wasn't a popular-type computer book. You might be better off looking online.