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Prentice Hall: Upper Saddle River, NJ,
1998. 338 pp, index. ISBN 0-13-373275-4. $59.00.
Recently several short texts on intermediate
organic chemistry have been published, intended for use in
one-term courses for advanced undergraduates and for graduate
students who need more background before taking a
graduate-level course. These books fill a need not fully met by
graduate-level texts such as Lowry and Richardson's
Mechanism and Theory in Organic Chemistry or Carey and Sundberg's
Advanced Organic Chemistry.
The pedagogic philosophy behind
Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions and
Mechanisms is pithily explained in Miller's introduction: in order to maintain student
interest, advanced topics are introduced early and theory is
presented in context. Miller meets these goals admirably. The
discussions are pellucid, and I found myself enjoying the book immensely.
Miller presents material in a nonstandard order,
choosing to handle chemistry often neglected in basic organic
courses first, and introducing bonding theory and concepts as
they are needed to explain the reactions being discussed. He
wisely includes a two-chapter module on heterocyclic
chemistry, pointing out that this topic is essential to biochemistry
but typically neglected by introductory organic chemistry
texts. Each chapter is extensively referenced to the primary
and secondary literature.
Advanced Organic
Chemistry offers exciting, indeed almost breakneck, coverage of the most interesting topics in
physical organic chemistry. The first chapter presents a
thorough discussion of what many students somehow don't pick up
during organic chemistry: how to push electrons. This
leads to a discussion of Lewis structures and resonance
theory. However, students are not allowed to bask very long in
this simple model, because they are immediately plunged
into three chapters of electrocyclic and sigmatropic reactions,
in which Miller introduces molecular orbital theory, orbital
symmetry, and frontier orbital interactions.
He then turns to the application of these principles
to charged species: cationic rearrangements and
nonclassical cations occupy two chapters, and two more chapters
cover rearrangements and reactions of carbanions, free radicals,
and 6-electron neutral species. The presentation of all this in
only 11 chapters (including the two on heterocycles) means
that, while the pace is rapid, it is not too rapid for a
one-semester course for undergraduates.
Nevertheless, this book is not perfect. There are not
as many practice problems as would be desirable. The
problems are good, but neither answers nor leading references
are provided for most of them. Lack of problems, and of
answers and references, is a serious deficiency for a topic in which
practice is the sine qua non, and I found myself missing
Lowry and Richardson's extensive, fully referenced problem sets.
There is no presentation of chemical kinetics.
While kinetics is used to discuss certain reactions, there is no
specific discussion of this essential topic. Instead Miller appears
to assume that his students fully remember whatever
exposure they had to rate laws in general chemistry. I was
impressed by the concise yet thorough discussion of polar,
resonance, and steric free-energy relationships that occupies Chapter
5; but this material does not seem to be connected to
anything else in the text, and one feels that Miller is presenting
the information because it's expected of him.
Miller has kept his text short and interesting by
dealing exclusively with topics that most physical organic
chemistsincluding this writerfind sexy: rearrangements and
pericyclic processes, with a liberal dose of nonclassical species
and electron-deficient neutral species. He is to be
especially applauded for his insistence on including two chapters
of heterocyclic chemistry. On the other hand, the short
shrift given to kinetics and to bread-and-butter physical
organic chemistry (e.g., nucleophilic and electrophilic
substitution reactions) means that students do not have a chance to
deepen their knowledge of these topics during the course.
This objection carries less weight for students en route to
graduate school, where they will be confronted with a more
conventional and thorough physical organic chemistry course.
But it is, I think, a problem for the student who is planning
to teach high school or to go directly into industry, where
more "boring" organic reactions are of great importance.
The other problem I have with this text is the
price. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but I still consider the price of
the text as one of the factors in a decision to adopt. A short
text should be inexpensive enough to give the instructor
freedom in assigning students to buy supplementary material, but
at $59.00 I found Miller's book a little rich for my blood.
I would love to use Miller's book for my advanced
organic chemistry course. It is lucid, interesting, and well paced
and concentrates on subjects too often neglected. But the
failure to treat kinetics-together with the price, which makes
it harder to include supplemental material on kinetics while
keeping the course price reasonable-does not allow me
to do so. Nevertheless, I recommend this book for
departments that have a separate kinetics course.
See Letter re: this article.
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