|
Organic Chemistry, 2nd ed.
Marye Anne Fox and James K. Whitesell. Jones
and Bartlett: Sudbury, MA, 1997, ISBN 0-7637-0178-5. $83.75.
and
Core Organic Chemistry (abbreviated edition)
Marye Anne Fox and James K. Whitesell. Jones
and Bartlett: Sudbury, MA, 1997, ISBN 0-7637-0367-2. $68.75.
Casablanca; Star
Wars; Independence Day; Morrison & Boyd; Solomons; McMurry. Blockbusters all. Now, the
improved second edition of Fox and Whitesell, Organic
Chemistry, has entered the somewhat crowded theater of
textbooks available for use in a serious course of organic
chemistry. Does it warrant consideration for recognition
within the previously mentioned pantheon? It just might.
Some decades ago, Cram and Hammond recognized
the value of an introductory organic text developed around
the structure/mechanism format, but it and its
multiauthored successors were unable to muscle out those texts
nominally built around the study of functional groups. Still, for
many of us, the more logical, clarifying, and satisfying
approach to teaching organic uses structural features and
reaction mechanisms to bring better order and linkages to the
overwhelming amount of information available in our
course. Fox and Whitesell revived the Cram and Hammond
format, modernized it, acknowledged by emphasis on the
bioorganic the real "customers", and delivered a textbook in 1994.
(See review by Samuel Levine, J. Chem.
Educ. 1994, 71, A261.) In short order, a second edition of this primary text has
been published as well as the first edition of an abbreviated
version. As in the earlier edition, the authors have
streamlined the "core" material presented to fewer than 850 pages
(includes summaries, reviews, and problems). Nothing
omitted from the typical organic textbook fare is likely to
be missed. This core material is organized into 16
chapters. The first five introduce structural theory, including
stereochemistry, and spectroscopy. Chapters 6 - 13
coherently present theory based on type of reactionaddition,
elimination, substitutionand type of reaction
speciescarbocation, carbanion, radical. The final three
chapters within the independently available core discuss the
special topics of skeletal rearrangement, multistep synthesis,
and polymers. As suggested, this 16-chapter text is available
as Core Organic Chemistry. Beyond this core are seven
additional "stand-alone" chapters that can be purchased
individually or the entire 23-chapter text can be purchased
as Organic Chemistry, 2nd edition. These seven
well-presented special-topics chapters focus on subjects such as
naturally occurring oxygen-continuing compounds, catalyzed
reactions, and the molecular basis for drug action, and each
is either 32 or 48 pages in length. In addition to either of
these two texts, a group of ancillary materials is available,
among them the expected Study Guide and Solutions
Manual. Included gratis with either text is a CD-ROM entitled
Chemistry in Motion, and noted within the text are the
reference points where this CD-ROM offers guidance. Also,
relevantly referenced in the text is the use of a separately
available CD-ROM set, CHEM-TV. Organic Chemistry I and
II.
The book features the extensive, integrated use of
line drawings for structure representation, curved arrows
for electron movement, and energy considerations for chemical reactivity explanations. Spectroscopy is presented early
in the text and is used sparingly, though usefully,
afterwards. Space-filling models for molecular structure are
used throughout, although I found them often more
decorative than instructive. The Chemistry in
Motion CD-ROM colorfully displays many of the complex molecules as well
as mechanistic and conformational details, but the
depictions fell short of my expectation. The book contains a
superior set of problems, presented as exercises within the
chapter and as review and supplemental problems at chapter's
end. The Study Guide gives answers, with useful associated
narrative, to the exercises and review, but not the
supplemental, problems. Each chapter concludes with a summary
and reaction review as needed. From time to time, collections
of reactions and synthetic methods are compiled as tables,
and the appendix includes a synthetic method summary
and glossary of terms.
In the beginning of the preface, the authors bluntly
reveal what we already know. Many students find
organic chemistry a daunting experience and, when they cannot
locate its relevance to their academic life, even suggest
that it's boring, a jumble of memorization. By structuring
the subject matter differently, trimming unneeded
information, regularly cross-referencing and summarizing, and
frequently presenting examples from the commercial and
the bioorganic worlds, the authors have attempted to
counter the criticism. However, without bringing some
personal viewpoint to a book review, usually guided by
thoughtful subjectivity, a reviewer does little more than provide
information readily obtained from the publisher's
advertising. With that backdrop, my assessment of the strengths
and weaknesses of the Fox and Whitesell text proceeds.
For me, the crowning asset of this work is its
approach and concept organization; it arranges organic chemistry
in a pedagogically sound manner. The writing is efficient
and generally quite clear. Humor even appears, primarily in
the excellent brief but numerous "chemical perspectives"
insets included throughout the text. On occasion (somewhat
surprisingly for this tightly worded text), detailed explanations, usually of associated diagrams, become tiresome and a
few chapter openings sputter with unnecessary repetition.
For a book with so much content, only a few errors were
noted, and those may be corrected in subsequent printings.
I perused this text at a far more rapid clip than
would a student, which resulted in two general
impressions that might not transfer from a more leisurely reading.
Though the basic content is presented clearly and
supported by timely examples, the pace is relentless. Classroom and
tutorial sessions have great potential for relevance and
usefulness, especially in conveying some sense of discovery
that the text lacks. The metaphor of organic chemistry as a
holiday feast surfaced on more than one occasion. As the
pages turned, the ingredients were being assembled, the
recipes referenced, and some dishes prepared, with the promise
of a later, fulfilling meal. But my hunger needs were more
immediate. It takes over 300 pages, 40% of the core text,
before chemical reactions and mechanisms are discussed
in detailbefore nibbling can occur. Acknowledging
that mechanistic theory is supported logically by structural
understandings, chemical reactivity is too important to
postpone. Subjectivity exposed.
Concerns notwithstanding, Fox and Whitesell have
created an impressive alternative to the recent traditions
of organic textbooks, using an approach that merits
serious consideration. It remains for those of us who teach
organic how best to use this valuable addition to the marketplace.
|