Sorry, I don't have any links. But I'm an "old-school" electrician, starting as a kid with my father who was an engineer and had a basement workshop full of electronic gear. Then as a teenager, I was an apprentice electrician at a big summer camp where the old guy quickly decided it was better for me to go out an fix everything while he hung around the shop, LOL. This continued over the years as I worked as a theatrical electrician, messed with computers and rewired several old houses.
By the time the web came along, I really wasn't looking for any kind of instruction.
Are you really having problems with power surges? I've never had an issue with those anywhere I've lived and never had a whole house surge protector. Just be sure that you really need something like that before spending a lot of money. It's my understanding that the utility company is liable for appliance damage if what they provide doesn't meet some kind of spec. I'd guess their website has some info on that.
I don't know exactly what you consider a "surge protector", but the ones I know about constantly monitor voltage and can clip it off in a fraction of a second when that happens. I don't think this causes anything to "shut down", although there might be a "blip" where the lights flicker. In some situations a circuit breaker might trip that would require manual reset. But like I said, I really don't know, have never seen such a system.
You know what a sine wave looks like, right? Should be easy to google if not. Ideally, alternating current would have this form, where it switches from plus to minus 60 times a second. But various things could cause that smooth wave to be rough and "jaggy" and those would be variations in the voltage. On the sine wave graph, the X-axis (from left to right) represents time and the Y-axis (up and down) represents voltage. It switches from positive to negative when the wave crosses the X axis. So a "rough" sine wave could create interference on your TV set or noise on a radio, or flickering in your lights. But this is all more complex in the digital age, because all these devices are capable of filtering a lot of that out.
Amperage is the power you are actually using to run your lights, air conditioner, etc. Did you ever learn the "West Virginia Law"? W=VA.... Watts equals Volts times Amperes. So (to simplify), if you are burning a 100 watt light bulb and the power company is providing 100 volts, we can solve that equation as 1 Amp = 100 Watts / 100 Volts. The wattage of the light bulb is constant, that doesn't change. But the voltage you are supplied can vary in a certain range. Now, if they send you 120 volts, then that would be 0.833 amps = 100 watts / 120 volts. Given a constant load (the 100 watt bulb), the amperage changes along with any change in voltage.
Do you have examples of appliances that were damaged by a power surge in your home?