<p>SAT 1 (besides the "compulsory" Collegeboard blue book)
SAT 2 Math Level II
SAT 2 Chemistry
SAT 2 Physics
SAT 2 Biology
SAT 2 World History
College application (essay-writing guides, tips on teacher rec, how to tackle the application process, etc.)</p>
<p>Princeton review 11 practice test for SAT I. ANything by PR is pretty good for writing and reading. Math... just know it. the PR "joe bloggs' and PITA methods are unbelievably puerile and actually takes more time to answer than if you just solve for the question directly.
SAT MATH II: PR review- same level. barron's math review -harder than actual test but very thorough and timeconsuming
Chem and Physics: barron's. I dunno aobut bio or world history, but from my personal experience I find that for science SAT II's practicing with the multiplel choice section of corresponding AP exmas really helped. I practiced for Physics subject test with AP Physics stuff and got a 780. But of course, you really have to know it. </p>
<p>On writign college essay. I don't know if that's the exact title, but many people recommend that book. it's small and might even be availabe at your library. But i suggest pouring out your bucks for college application/essay books. </p>
<p>Also for SATI: the old collegeboard's 10 REAL SAT's 2nd and 3rd editoin. Just take out the analogy sections and the math and CR are all the same.</p>
<p>I have PR for SAT I (both Cracking and 11 Practice Tests), Math 2, Chem, Physics and World History...they are all great.The Joe Bloggs approach is actually pretty simple and easy to apply across different tests, and saves a lot of time. I like it.</p>