Unfortunately, I have never read a good book on NYSE tape reading, and it is too bad, because this is absolutely the most important skill to have.
A list of things you want to be pay attention to (besides the obvious uptick BID / offer stepping down's) :
1) Stocks rarely go straight up or straight down, it is very common for a stock to go up 30 cents and fall back 10-20 cents to shake the trees before they take it higher. You have to pay attention to the volume, is there more volume printed on the buy side than the sell side? The charts are nice as it tells you the overall trend, but nothing like a good tape reader holding on to a position through wiggles for good gains. The sizes printed, and where they printed, can be the most important piece of information.
2) Double prints are where specialists go long or short, (two prints on same price), you need to read his motives, especially off the open. Typically a gap-up on weak volume is primed for a short as the specialist went short with double prints and he will hammer the stock . . .
3) Specialist habits, like the type of shakeout he does, how he hands figures and half's, etc . . . It is critical to learn a specialist's rthyme.
4) Climax volume, anytime you see those go off, expect a big squeeze/pullback . . . always want to cover/sell at least half of your position when you see big volume going off after the stock is in an extended trend . . .
Being a relatively new trader (8 months) myself I have to say tape reading is my weakst link, good luck, because it really is the most important aspect of NYSE trading, READING THE SPECIALIST . . .