There is a brand new book by Karsten Mueller which annotates lots of Fischer games. I have not seen the book yet but John Donaldson gave it a good review.
Also Lou Hays did a book on all of Fischer's games. I think between My 60 Memorable Game and the Solits book you are well covered.
I've just read Frank Brady's Bobby Fischer: Profile of a Prodigy. At the end of the book is 90 Fischer games annotated by Brady (in Descriptive). My first question is: are Brady's annotations worth reading?
I have Fischer's 60 Memorable Games (2009 ed.) but this only covers his games until the late 60s, thus neglecting the most important phase of his career, 1970-72. Plus it only has 60 games...
There seem to be surprisingly few books that cover Fischer's entire career. There is Wade's The Games of Robert J. Fischer (2009) - has anyone seen this? Is it instructive? It apparently contains all Fischer's games but I wonder how useful the annotations are.
Then there is Soltis' Bobby Fischer Rediscovered, which analyzes 100 of his games (so better than just 60 games). Would this book be useful for the learner?
Then there is Russians vs. Fischer by Plisetsky (158 games). Is this something that can be of benefit to chess improvement?
Apparently Schiller's Learn from Bobby Fischer's Greatest Games is awful.
Are there any other large collections of Fischer annotated games to consider?
Thanks for input.