CHEMISTRY & CHEMICAL REACTIVITY, 7th Edition combines thorough instruction with powerful multimedia tools to give you a deeper understanding of general chemistry concepts. The Enhanced Review Edition combines the text's signature logical organization, macro to micro orientation, and superior art program with new exam preparation sections designed to help students better prepare for multiple chapter examinations. "Let's Review" sections present study tips, key points lists, and new exam-type questions for multiple chapters grouped according to where most exams occur in the course. The text emphasizes the visual nature of chemistry and illustrates the interrelationship of the macroscopic, symbolic, and particulate levels of chemistry. With clear writing, seamless technology integration, and robust homework/assessment tools, the text equips you with tools to empower the mastery, assignment, and assessment of chemical principles. The art program reveals these three levels in engaging detail--- and is fully integrated with new key media components. The Web-based tutorial ChemistryNOW generates a personalized study plan to meet your specific needs, and includes Go Chemistry mini video lectures and flash cards that offer the perfect quick review. Fully customizable Online Web-Based Learning (OWL) maximizes study time and offers an optional e-book. With hundreds of guided simulations, animations, video clips, and more, CHEMISTRY & CHEMICAL REACTIVITY is more completely integrated with accompanying technology than any other text on the market."
After two years of having this in my currently reading shelf, I think I am finally going to sideline it, at least for the time being. My goal was to read the entire book and do every problem in the book as penance for never doing any problems in college. Somehow (by the use of multiple choice questions and humongous classes with ridiculous curves)I got through two semesters of college chemistry by never solving a single problem, taking educated guesses on all exams, and still passing...the very thought of the it blows me away. So for penance years later, I thought I should work every single problem in the book. Well after getting though half the book I realized how easy it would have been to ace and understand chemistry, if I had only cared enough at the time to crack the book. Unfortunately when my momentum was carrying me forward happily toward my goal, I reached the middle of the book, at which point I decided I would take a summer/semester break myself, and return to it when the weather turned again. But my momentum being lost, as well as my son's nap time, I never did get back into it. I do have the confidence now though that I can do the dreaded subject just fine, when I again find the time to finish this goal. Leaving off on pg 546 of 1120...
I had this book for two semesters of college level general chemistry; a requirement for my major. This book was good, as good as 1000-ish page textbook based in one of your most disliked subjects can be. I must say that the problems weren't great. My first semester my teacher wrote his own questions, the second semester my teacher assigned questions from the book. I succeeded better and understood the topics better by doing 20 specifc questions from the teacher than 50 from the textbook. Overall, I passed (I have three exams left for my secnond semester as of now but will certaintly pass) both classes depite the fact that I despise essentially all forms of physical sciences.
Generally accessible and well written. In a few places I found concepts difficult to grasp, and perhaps the presentation could be tweaked. I appreciated the wide range of material covered and later chapters introducing biochem and Ochem. The level of depth was sufficient for my purposes.
A well-presented chemistry textbook, but not as comprehensive as it needs to be. Requires a few smaller companion books to cover everything in enough detail.