Biochemistry [Print Replica] [Kindle Edition] Author: | Language: English | ISBN:
B00B7JKF6M | Format: PDF, EPUB
Biochemistry Epub Free
Direct download links available Biochemistry [Print Replica] [Kindle Edition] Epub Free for everyone book 4shared, mediafire, hotfile, and mirror link Continuing Garrett and Grisham's innovative conceptual and organizing "Essential Questions" framework, BIOCHEMISTRY guides students through course concepts in a way that reveals the beauty and usefulness of biochemistry in the everyday world. Offering a balanced and streamlined presentation, this edition has been updated throughout with new material and revised presentations. For the first time, this book is integrated with OWL, a powerful online learning system for chemistry that engages students and improves learning outcomes.
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- File Size: 150041 KB
- Print Length: 1280 pages
- Publisher: Cengage Learning; 5 edition (September 24, 2013)
- Sold by: Cengage Learning
- Language: English
- ASIN: B00B7JKF6M
- Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
X-Ray for Textbooks:
- Lending: Not Enabled
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #593,515 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
I took 2 courses in undergraduate biochemistry, and this was the book used. The authors strike a balance between biology (i.e. discussion of regulation and physiology) and chemistry (i.e. reaction mechanisms and structures of proteins). This book is middle-of the line between Voet (hardcore chemistry/structural biology) and Lehninger (physiology/pre-med focus). The illustrations were clear and overall the text was comprehensible. For teaching an undergraduate course in biochemistry, Garrett & Grisham is hard to beat.
By blargle
My university uses this book for the two-semester biochem sequence for BSc Chemistry/Biochemistry students. It's a well-written book, overall -- lots of information but not a very dense "scientific" read. The best part is the way the authors keep tying things back to reality ... sidebars explain how the dynamics of protein folding affect Alzheimer's disease, or what protease inhibition means for the development of HIV drugs.
The figures are aesthetically pleasing and really help to clarify descriptions in the text. The only problem is that the figures are usually a couple pages away from the text they refer to. For example, when describing the mechanism of chymotrypsin cleavage, it would make a lot more sense to put all the text on the left page and the mechanism/structures on the right page. Instead, the text is about three pages before the mechanism, meaning the reader has to keep flipping back and forth trying to understand what is going on. It's like that in most if not all cases. Not a big deal, but it's the sort of thing the layout editor should have realized when putting the book together. Maybe they'll fix it in the fourth edition.
Regardless, this is a very good biochem book. I'd recommend it for an undergraduate student of chemistry or biochemistry.
By Daisy Turner
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