Sorry.. another book recommendation thread!

<p>Hey everyone, my first time posting in these forums. </p>

<p>My SAT average score is about 1800(-/+)</p>

<p>Well, the situation is that i'm a senior about to take the october and if necessary november SAT. I've been studying by myself. This is the schedule i have been following</p>

<p>Critical Reading</p>

<hr>

<ul>
<li>Read news articles</li>
<li>Read TIME magazine articles</li>
<li>Looking up any words I dont understand</li>
<li>Pouring over vocab</li>
</ul>

<p>Writing</p>

<hr>

<ul>
<li>Reviewing grammatical rules</li>
<li>Reading. </li>
</ul>

<p>Math</p>

<hr>

<ul>
<li>Practice problems w/ explanations</li>
</ul>

<p>I currently have the CB Blue Book however, I find that the math review in the book is very weak and spread out and does not give me any 'tools' I can keep. </p>

<p>I looked up on CEEAE.ORG and I found that the </p>

<p>-Cracking the New SAT (2007 edition)Princeton Review
-SAT Comprehensive Program(2007 Edition) // Premier Edition(??)</p>

<p>were two very popular books which both seem to have great in depth explanations with realistic practice tests and practice questions. </p>

<p>My question is, which one will be better suited for me? Keep in mind I am studying alone and my performance in math isn't so great. Are their any better books? My main focus is on great explanation and a large amount of questions. </p>

<p>Thanks in advance!</p>

<p>I have not heard of the second book, the Comprehensive program. Gruber's is supposed to be great for SAT math...have you tried that?</p>

<p>MM .. honestly, i would stay away from PR and Kaplan, the tests are wayy to easy and pointless. I would recomment Barron's math because they overprep you and theres give you a barrage of practice.</p>