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Chemistry: The Central Science, 7th ed.
Theodore L. Brown, H. Eugene LeMay, Jr., and Bruce E. Bursten. Prentice-Hall: Upper Saddle River, NJ, 1997. xxxi + 991 pp + appendices. Figs. and Tables. 20.8 x 26.0 cm.
Chemistry & Chemical Reactivity, 3rd ed.
John C. Kotz and Paul Treichel, Jr. Saunders: Fort Worth, TX, 1996. xxxii + 1121 pp + appendices. Figs. and tables. 22.4 x 26.2 cm.
The two textbooks discussed in this review are
both fine general chemistry texts, designed for mainline
first-year college courses. Adopters of either text will find
them complete, well written textbooks with clean, clear
teaching styles. Both books follow traditional general chemistry
outlines, with traditional content. While applications are
well interwoven throughout both texts, neither should be
viewed as "applications oriented". A brief comparison will
follow individual descriptions.
Chemistry, The Central Science, 7th ed., by
Brown, LeMay, and Bursten has a traditional chapter sequence.
The most distinctive content is an excellent chapter on
materials, which includes liquid crystals, polymers, and
ceramics. Descriptive inorganic, organic, and biochemistry are
found in the last chapters, with an "add-on" flavor. The
authors state the textbook's advantages are clear writing,
scientific accuracy and currency, strong end-of-chapter problems,
and concept-oriented learning. I agree with these
characterizations. Clear writing has long been a strength of this
book, and it certainly also includes the typical 100+ problems
per chapter. There is a real feel of "being current" about
this bookmany features are chosen with this in mind, and
recent dates are pointedly shown. Topics like taxol, atomic
force microscopy, and buckyballs are examples. The content is
presented clearly, with a straight science feel, and with a
sense of comprehensive treatment (both common approaches
to limiting reagents are fully developed). Visually, the look
is rather dense, with perhaps an excess of graphics per page
(a comment also made in the review of the prior edition,
J. Chem. Educ. 1995, 72, A107A108). The overly dense appearance also extends to the problem sections, which are
only rarely interrupted by diagrams or other graphics.
The Brown, Lemay, and Bursten text is
accompanied by several ancillaries of interest. One, "Experimenting
with the Internet, A Guide for Chemistry Students" by
Thomas Gardner, is a nice general introduction to the Internet,
answering questions like "What is FTP?" or "What is the
TCP stack?" Although chemical examples are used, the book
is only modestly useful. A demo of "Matter", a CD-ROM
designed to support this text was also reviewed. The
CD-ROM is a lecture presentation aid only, and is not for student
use. It contains figures, lab demo videos, and some
animations. I found the visual quality to be marginal, with poor resolution and background colors. Finally, a WWW site is under construction for this text
( http://www.prenhall.com/brown/), which looks like a good resource. It includes nice practice tests for student use, for example.
Chemistry & Chemical Reactivity, 3rd ed., by Kotz
and Treichel also has a standard chapter layout, but is
organized into a nice superstructure of major topicsfor
example, five chapters on structure and bonding, and
seven chapters on principles of reactivity (including rates,
thermodynamics, equilibria). The organic chemistry chapter
is in the middle of the book, after the bonding section.
The stated goal of the authors is to convey the excitement of
discovery within chemistry. The text does this with
chemical puzzles to start and end each chapter, and also with
some emphasis on the people of chemistry. My primary
criterion when evaluating a text is clarity of writing, and this
book meets that criterion well. The concepts are clearly
stated, and the calculations are carefully presented. There is a
clear emphasis on concepts, with a special section of
conceptual questions in each end-of-chapter problem set. Visually,
this book is clean and clear. Graphics are common, but never
to the point of seeming too busy.
A single ancillary was reviewed with this text,
the Saunders Interactive General Chemistry CD-ROM by
Kotz and Vining. The CD-ROM is an exciting, full-fledged
interactive learning tool, designed for use by students. The
full text of the textbook is present in PDF format, but that
is the least of the content. A complete Interactive
Chemistry program is included, which amounts to a fully realized
multimedia presentation of General Chemistry. Rather than mimic the Kotz and Treichel text, it presents an independent interactive learning experience covering the main
concepts of each chapter. While not every concept is
presented, about 80% of the main ideas in each chapter are
included. Animations such as depictions of the kinetic
molecular theory of gases related to Boyle's law are very effective
(see and hear the change in frequency of gas molecules
colliding with the container wall as the volume is decreased).
Problem-solving tutorials are included, as are many
interactive graphs and video demonstrations. The CD-ROM also
includes CAChe Visualizer for Education, a molecular
modeling program, complete with 300 predrawn structures
and various visualization tools. A basic graphic utility
("Mr. Plot") and a useful workbook for the CD-ROM are also
included. Using this CD-ROM, you truly realize the power
of multimedia to communicate visually and by sound. It is
exciting! You also realize that the CD-ROM does not
replace a printed text. Even though the full text is available on
the CD-ROM, the printed version is much more usable.
This CD-ROM product was clearly integrated into the
textbook development project from the beginning. For an early
edition, it is amazingly mature. No problems were
encountered while using this edition (v. 2.2) with either Windows 95
or Windows NT, and the visual appearance is excellent.
Finally, a few words of direct comparison. Overall,
the Brown, LeMay, and Bursten book has a serious-science, denser feel in both content and style, while the Kotz and Treichel book is more open and approachable, more conversational. Both are solid, mainline general chemistry texts, and both comprehensively covered all the specific topics I went looking for. Both texts include about the same number of "boxed special topics", although the Kotz and Treichel book had longer write-ups on featured scientists. I recommend both texts highly, with the Saunders Interactive General Chemistry CD-ROM available at extra cost with the Kotz and Treichel book being a very successful, very useful multimedia companion for general chemistry.
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