Average customer rating:
- MY LIFESAVER
- Not really what I was looking for
- It helps me a lot!
- Student Solution Manual to Accompany Chemistry
|
Student Solution Manual to Accompany Chemistry
Raymond Chang
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Look Inside Science Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Chemistry with Online ChemSkill Builder, Eighth Edition
-
Chemistry, Eighth Edition
-
Student Study Guide to accompany Chemistry
-
Chemistry
-
Chemistry with Online Learning Center Passward Card
ASIN: 0072549920 |
Customer Reviews:
MY LIFESAVER.......2006-09-04
I highly recommend getting this book, and if you have to choose between this book and the text, get this one. Science is step-by-step problem solving, not just reading paragraphs of words.
This book takes all the even-numbered problems in the text and goes through them step-by-step with explanations, like a teacher would on a board. Becuase there are many problems of the same kind, you can do the odd-numbered ones easily after reading through the even-numbered ones.
I got a 4.0 in the class, and I never bought the textbook. I only had this book. I used it extensively for studying for the exams, and for working on homework problems. I just borrowed the textbook from the library when I needed it (for example, getting the homework problems).
Opening this book is like turning to your own personal Chemistry professor.
Not really what I was looking for.......2006-09-01
Its interesting to note that this solution's manual only has the answers to the evens. A much earlier version of this solution's manual has all of the answers. Why was it changed? I have no idea. But the change was definatly not a good thing. Especially, if since my teacher keeps giving me the odd problems
It helps me a lot!.......2006-04-12
Although the author said in the book that this book is not a brief from the main text book and you should mainly read the main text book before readind this solution manual, I found that I could understand it even though I didn't read the main text book at all. It did help me reduce my valuable time. I could use that reduced time to read all other textbook for other many subjects.
Student Solution Manual to Accompany Chemistry.......2006-03-22
I found this very helpful. The solutions were worked out and easily understood. I would have liked solutions to all questions.
Average customer rating:
- Very good introduction to physical chemistry
- for those who don't like Levine
- Terrible semester
- Terrible. Absolutely terrible.
- Great Book
|
Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Physical Chemistry
Ira N Levine
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Physical & Theoretical
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Physical Chemistry
| Physical & Theoretical
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Physical & Theoretical
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Experiments In Physical Chemistry
-
Schaum's Outline of Physical Chemistry (2nd Edition)
-
Inorganic Chemistry
-
Physical Chemistry
-
Fundamentals of Momentum, Heat, and Mass Transfer
ASIN: 0072393602 |
Book Description
Ira N. Levine's fifth edition of Physical Chemistry provides students with an in-depth fundamental treatment of physical chemistry. At the same time, the treatment is made easy to follow by giving full step-by-step derivations, clear explanations and by avoiding advanced mathematics unfamiliar to students. Necessary math and physics have thorough review sections. Worked examples are followed by a practice exercise.
Customer Reviews:
Very good introduction to physical chemistry.......2007-07-23
A previous reviewer stated that physical chemistry is complicated. As a retired NASA researcher with 44 years experience specializing in physical chemistry I readily acknowledge that physical chemistry can be a very challenging subject. But, personally, I have also found it to be immensely fascinating and rewarding. There are several good textbooks on physical chemistry but, in my opinion, none is better than this one. Levine has done a very good job of presenting the material contained in an understandable fashion without compromising scientific rigor.
An earlier reviewer stated that this book is full of inaccuracies, but I strongly disagree with this statement. One example of an alleged inaccuracy which this reviewer cited is Levine`s statement that, at the velocity of light, photons have mass. This is a true statement; photons do indeed have both mass and momentum and thus can cause pressure on objects they strike. I beg you not to be biased against this outstanding book by this flawed review.
The topic of physical chemistry -- in which chemistry, physics, and mathematics overlap and interact -- clearly does not appeal to everyone. Even many chemists shun the rigors of physical chemistry as much as possible. But for those studying this important subject, I highly recommend this book. And some of you may even come to love this fascinating subject as I do.
for those who don't like Levine.......2007-04-25
If you want the most student friendly book get Physical Chemistry , 4/e by Laidler, Meiser, Sanctuary, ISBN 061815292X.
Description on their website says "With its clear explanations and practical pedagogy, Physical Chemistry is less intimidating to students than other texts, without sacrificing the mathematical rigor and comprehensiveness necessary for a junior-level physical chemistry course. The text's long-standing reputation for accessible writing provides clear instruction and superior problem-solving support for students." I second that.
see my review here Physical Chemistry I mention the alternatives as well.
Terrible semester.......2007-03-31
Physical Chemistry is complicated, there is no way of getting around that. This book will go through the derivations, but never include units. That is a huge problem.
Terrible. Absolutely terrible........2006-09-24
I don't know why so many other people think this book is good. I feel just the opposite.
First, it is filled with factual inaccuracies. Let me quote just one howler, from page 604. "At speed c, the photon has a nonzero mass m." Yes, you heard right, Dr. Levine thinks photons have mass. He then goes on to give an incorrect statement and explanation of the De Broglie wavelength. (Among other things, he uses "mv" instead of momentum, which is of course true only in the case of Newtonian mechanics with massive particles. Sigh.) These gaffes are rarely typos, they are generally the sort of thing which someone with a fundamental understanding of the underlying physics cringes at.
Second, Levine is incapable of going a paragraph without interrupting himself. Given the choice of stating something simply, or filling a paragraph with fifteen references (placed in the text, not in footnotes) and a few asides, he always goes for the latter. References are a fine thing, but placing them inside the text and doing it constantly interrupts the reader's thinking.
Taking an example a few pages earlier in the text, it is not sufficient for Levine to start to explain the photoelectric effect, he has to add in a few lines about practical applications of photocells. All fine and well, but it distracts from the flow of the logic, and frankly the applications of photocells aren't germane to what is being taught here, which is that light is quantized. Levine can never resist the temptation to add a little aside -- there are even spots in the book where he interrupts his own interruptions.
Third, Levine is also incapable of writing without making what he discusses somehow seem meaningless and uninteresting. Take thermodynamics. In the hands of a bad author, thermodynamics can seem like a swirling vortex of formula manipulations, but if you read, say, Enrico Fermi's pamphlet from the 1930s, you instead feel as though you're seeing the power of a few ideas applied rigorously to an interesting domain -- you feel the relevance of the topic to the world and you feel the sparkle of the author's intellect. Levine takes this same topic and makes it feel like an endless parade of noise.
Indeed, Levine can take all sorts topics that are full of inherent interest and relevance and make them seem utterly abstract, boring and lifeless. In order to cover up for this, he throws in lots of asides (see above) and the occassional several paragraph digression about the life of some famous scientist. Sadly, you don't make a topic more "interesting for the kids" by throwing in random asides and distractions -- you do it by knowing how to teach. A good teacher can make anything interesting -- a bad one can't make up for it by doing a few juggling tricks.
Between Levine's self-interruptions, asides and dry presentation, somehow the length of the text always seems an order of magnitude longer than necessary to explain any given subject. I often mentally scream "get to the point already!" as I read.
There is also the question of order of presentation. Honestly, I think that starting a discussion of thermodynamics without first at least glossing to the kinetic theory of gases is a mistake. Abstraction has to be tempered with good mental models of what is going on and why it is going on or the student becomes lost. Even a couple of pages showing that the Ideal Gas Law is an emergent result of a simple classical mechanical model would ground the student better to the material. This sort of thing happens over and over in Levine, with discussion being often both too rigorous and unfounded in basic principles at the same time -- quite a trick to pull off.
Levine's text is, of course, in its fifth edition. Presumably, had the earlier revision been left alone, sales might have flagged as used copies from bored students uninterested in holding on to them filled the market. The publishers have therefore done the usual thing and produced trivial updates every few years to assure that used copies become worthless. Does this new fifth edition come with snazzy new diagrams and all the other stigmata of the modern textbook industry? No. The diagrams in the text -- a text you pay a kings ransom for -- were clearly done in MacDraw and MacPaint in the mid-1980s. I am not that upset about this -- I just find it another irritation. Truthfully, I don't need snazzy illustrations -- my favorite physics and chemistry texts are often decades old -- but if you're going to pretend that you're doing a new edition for some reason other than to keep your sales numbers up, at least have the decency to spend a small amount of money on production to keep up appearances. Milking the students is an embarrassment, especially at the inflated price this book commands.
Oh, and did I mention that the book is insanely heavy? That's not a small thing if you have to haul it around a campus constantly.
As I said, I don't know why other reviewers like this book so much. I'm a confirmed science geek who loves reading science texts for their own sake and I'm having a great deal of difficulty reminding myself that this text (which is being used for a class I'm taking) is not reason enough to find the entire subject of physical chemistry an unbearably boring waste of time -- the topic is in fact interesting, it is this book which is the problem.
To survive the course I'm taking with my mind intact, I've used a succession of small texts by people like Fermi and Pauli. The contrast between people who understand a topic well enough to explain it clearly and simply and the people like Levine that churn out heavy uninteresting textbooks is striking. If you're a professor considering the use of this book, please, please, please don't do it. Find something else. there has to be a decent book on this topic out there somewhere.
As a final comment, let me say this is not the worst text I've ever used. That would be H.J. Pain's "The Physics of Vibrations and Waves". To damn Dr. Levine with faint praise, this book doesn't even come close to being as bad as that other text.
Great Book.......2006-04-22
I took both semesters of P.Chem, failing the first because I took way too many upper level Chem Classes & working as well as a weak background in Calc 3. After studying Calc III by myself over the summer and retaking the class, I am able to absorb so much more and I'm ripping a new one in this class. It is truly an amazing book. Having a solid math background helps one to 'connect the dots' so-to-speak whenever Dr. Levine makes these 'shortcuts'. Tons of worked examples, difficult yet definitely possible homework problems and an acutual intelligent sense of humor are woven into the this book making an extremely complex and difficult subject..... engaging, lol. I spend close to 40hrs. per test and I'm thankful I'm putting myeself through this. Great book, just make sure you have a solid understanding of partial diff eqns. and complex algebra before you take it. Not meant for the weak of mind.
Average customer rating:
|
Student Solutions Manual to accompany Chemistry
Raymond Chang
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Clinical Chemistry
| Pathology
| Specialties
| Medicine
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Clinical Chemistry
| Pathology
| Internal Medicine
| Medicine
| Medical
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Look Inside Science Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Medicine
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Chemistry
-
Student Study Guide to accompany Chemistry
-
Study Cards to accompany Chemistry (Chang Chemistry Series)
-
Writing Papers in the Biological Sciences
-
A Photographic Atlas for the Biology Laboratory 5th edition
ASIN: 0072980613 |
Book Description
By Brandon J. Cruickshank (Northern Arizona University) and Raymond Chang. This supplement contains detailed solutions and explanations for all even-numbered problems in the main text. The manual also includes a detailed discussion of different types of problems and approaches to solving chemical problems and tutorial solutions for many of the end-of-chapter problems in the text, along with strategies for solving them.
Average customer rating:
|
Student Solutions Manual to accompany Principles of General Chemistry
Martin Silberberg
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Principles of General Chemistry
-
Student Study Guide to accompany Principles of General Chemistry
-
Student Solutions Manual for use with fourth edition Chemistry
-
Chemistry in the Laboratory
-
Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change
ASIN: 0073107212 |
Book Description
By Patricia Amateis of Virginia Tech
This supplement contains detailed solutions and explanations for all even-numbered problems in the main text.
Average customer rating:
- Excellent book
- Slow shipping and handling
- Excellent
- Outstanding Text for Grad School
- The long wait is over...
|
Student Solutions Manual To Accompany Modern Physical Organic Chemistry
Michael B. Sponsler ,
Eric V. Anslyn , and
Dennis A. Dougherty
Manufacturer: Univ Science Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Organic
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Physics
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Organic
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Physics
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Strategic Applications of Named Reactions in Organic Synthesis
-
The Art of Writing Reasonable Organic Reaction Mechanisms
-
Advanced Organic Chemistry: Part A: Structure and Mechanisms (Advanced Organic Chemistry / Part A: Structure and Mechanisms)
-
Advanced Organic Chemistry, Fourth Edition - Part B: Reaction and Synthesis (Advanced Organic Chemistry / Advanced Organic Chemistry)
-
March's Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure (March's Advanced Organic Chemistry)
ASIN: 189138936X
Release Date: 2005-07-15 |
Product Description
This Student Solutions Manual, which provides complete solutions to all of the nearly 600 exercises in the accompanying textbook, will encourage students to work the exercises, enhancing their mastery of physical organic chemistry. When used properly by students to compare their solutions with the detailed solutions provided in the manual, it will serve as an excellent tool for sharpening skills and encouraging a deeper understanding of the concepts that are covered. Like the accompanying text by Anslyn and Dougherty, this manual also includes Going Deeper highlights on selected topics, where students can explore exceptions to the rule, discover surprising connections between topics, and gain insights into practical aspects of the material. Problem-solving strategies will be enhanced by students' coordinated use of the textbook and this manual.
Customer Reviews:
Excellent book.......2007-10-09
This book is excellent. If you study Physical chemistry, you must have one. Most content in this book is quite new, that you can not find in other books.
I love it very much! Service in Amazon is very goog!
Slow shipping and handling.......2007-09-19
The book is in fine condition, I just had to wait longer than I have ever waited for a book in my life.
Excellent.......2007-01-04
The book arrived on time in a good shape as I hoped it to be. I'm very glad I choose to purchase book from the seller and I will highly recommend it.
Outstanding Text for Grad School.......2006-12-09
I completed my first semester of Physical Organic chemistry using this textbook and I am pleased beyond words. The book is very well written, yet sophisticated enough to help advance new graduate students like myself to the level that our Professors understand concepts at. The problems at the end of the chapter are very useful and the answer guide (sold seperately) explains them quite well.
The book is also binded very solidly. The other people in my research group keep this text on their lab bookshelfs for reference and I have no doubt that I will do the same.
The long wait is over..........2006-09-19
Phys. Org. Chem. has always been one of my favourite subjects. As I graduated from school and college into university for my master's, I began to realise that it represents not so much a separate topic as a philosophy and approach; to treat chemical and biological systems from the perspective of structure, conformation, and reactivity, which are after all the most fundamental aspects of any such system. I reached the conclusion that phys org chem is a truly interdisciplinary framework, and any one who has a solid background in it can be a good computational chemist, synthetic organic chemist, and/or bioorganic/biochemist.
Unfortunately, all the classic phys org books until now have been of the 'pure' kind, focusing on mechanism and reactivity, but not discussing the interdisciplinary nature of the topic, especially for biological systems. My wait is over; Modern Physical Organic Chemistry by Dennis Dougherty and Eric Anslyn has completely and satisfactorily reinvented the phys org chem textbook. Now, one can look to a wholesome treatment of phys org as a multidisciplinary, fundamental, and exciting approach to both chemistry and biology. The book is worth its price, and covers the gamut of topics, including basic ones like mechanisms and bonding, but also is interspersed with lots of boxes and discussions explaining the applications of basic phys org concepts to host guest systems, proteins and nucleic acids, strained molecules, and materials science. Fantastic reference. It should make you a well-rounded chemist, which is the need of the day in today's era of collaborative research.
Average customer rating:
|
Student Study Guide and Solutions Manual to accompany General, Organic, and Biochemistry
Katherine J Denniston
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Organic
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Clinical Chemistry
| Pathology
| Specialties
| Medicine
| Subjects
| Books
Organic
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Clinical Chemistry
| Pathology
| Internal Medicine
| Medicine
| Medical
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Medicine
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
General, Organic, and Biochemistry
-
Lab Manual by Henrickson to accompany General, Organic & Biochemistry
-
Mathematics for College Physics
-
Learning Guide to accompany Principles of Anatomy and Physiology, 11th Edition
-
Laboratory Manual for General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry
Accessories:
-
Organic Chemistry Demystified
ASIN: 0072828498 |
Average customer rating:
|
Student Study Guide/Solutions Manual to Accompany General, Organic and BioChemistry
Katherine J Denniston ,
Joseph J Topping ,
Robert L Caret ,
Katherine Denniston ,
Joseph Topping , and
Robert Caret
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
General, Organic, and Biochemistry
-
Laboratory Manual for General, Organic, and Biochemistry to accompany Denniston's General, Organic and Biochemistry
-
Anesthesia and Co-Existing Disease Fourth Edition (Anesthesia and Co-Existing Disease)
-
Student Study Guide and Solutions Manual to accompany General, Organic, and Biochemistry
-
Basics of Anesthesia: with Evolve Website
ASIN: 0072472189 |
Average customer rating:
|
Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter And Change
Martin; Wiegand, Deborah; Samberg, Tris Silberberg
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Similar Items:
-
Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change
ASIN: B000L72UQE |
Average customer rating:
- kid review format because of privacy issues
|
Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter And Change
Martin Silberberg ,
Deborah Wiegand , and
Tris Samberg
Manufacturer: Mcgraw-Hill College
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Molecular Biology
| Biology
| Biological Sciences
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Molecular Biology
| Biology
| Biological Sciences
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Professional
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Science
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change
-
Student Study Guide to Accompany Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter And Change
-
Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change with Online ChemSkill Builder v.2
-
Chemistry Super Review
-
Student Solutions Manual for use with fourth edition Chemistry
ASIN: 0072410523
Release Date: 2002-07-01 |
Book Description
This manual contains complete worked-out solutions to all follow-up problems and about half of all the chapter problems. Each chapter of solutions opens with a summary of the text-chapter content and a list of key equations needed to solve the problems.
Customer Reviews:
kid review format because of privacy issues.......2007-01-21
This book is for the third edition, not the forth in case anyone couldn't tell, but a lot of the problems are the same (a little different order) It wasn't as helpful as I had hope'd since it only has the solutions for the odds, and the odds are already in the back of the book. However, it was nice to see the work on a few problems for which the back of the book had just listed the final answer for. For me it was worth buying, esp with the extremely low used book price.
Average customer rating:
- This is not the book I ordered!
|
Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Chemistry and Chemical Reactivity
John C. Kotz , and
Alton J. Banks
Manufacturer: Thomson Brooks/Cole
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Chemistry and Chemical Reactivity (with CD-ROM)
-
Study Guide to Accompany Chemistry & Chemical Reactivity
-
Chemistry and Chemical Reactivity (with General ChemistryNOW CD-ROM)
-
Chemistry in the Laboratory
-
Chemistry and Chemical Reactivity, Enhanced Review Edition (with General ChemistryNOW)
ASIN: 0030350166 |
Customer Reviews:
This is not the book I ordered!.......2005-10-02
I got the answer guild instead of the book I ordered. I would have sent it back but the envelope was trone to shreads, although that may have been the fault of the mailing service, but regardless i did not have the recources to retern it.
Books:
- Student Solution Manual to Accompany Chemistry
- Student Study Guide and Solutions Manual for Brown/Foote/Iverson's Organic Chemistry, 4th
- Systems Biology: Properties of Reconstructed Networks
- The 36-Hour Day: A Family Guide to Caring for Persons with Alzheimer Disease, Related Dementing Illnesses, and Memory Loss in Later Life (3rd Edition)
- The Beast in the Garden: The True Story of a Predator's Deadly Return to Suburban America
- The Complete Idiot's Guide to Anatomy and Physiology (The Complete Idiot's Guide)
- The Innocents
- The Ortho Problem Solver, Sixth Edition (Ortho Problem Solver)
- The Philosophy of Ecology: From Science to Synthesis
- The Reef Aquarium: Science, Art, and Technology, Vol. 3
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- Seeing through Zen: Encounter, Transformation, and Genealogy in Chinese Chan Buddhism
- Pawns in the Game
- On the Other Side of the Hill
- Patent Searching: Tools & Techniques
- In the Night Kitchen
- Molecular Modelling: Principles and Applications
- Japan : An Illustrated Encyclopedia
- Wanda Gg: A Catalogue Raisonn of the Prints
- Homology: The Hierarchical Basis of Comparative Biology
- How to Know the Cacti : Pictured Keys for Determining the Native Cacti of the United States and Many