Barry Thornton (died in 2003) dedicated his book "Edge of Darkness" to the high-definition monochrome photograph. He discusses about every aspect that influences sharpness, resolution, contrast etc. in a black&white print.
Half of his book covers darkroom techniques (e.g. development, printing techniques), the other half gives room for lenses, camera adjustment etc. and includes some aspects of human perception of the thing called "sharpness".
Barry is primarily a fine art printer. The examples in his book are mostly landscape photographs, taken with a Rollei SL66 camera. Rangefinders are covered in a small section where he discusses focussing.
I like his book very much. It offers valuable tipps and tricks (especially for darkroom equipment and processing) to improve techniques and to avoid mistakes. It really helps to understand interdependencies for high definition and sharp prints. As Gene stated: " It will change your whole way of thinking about photo "sharpness."
Besides all valuable information, it is real fun to read Barry's book. Especially I like his way to include anecdotes from his day-to-day life to explain or underline his photographic results.