Top SAT study books?

<p>Hi, on my first try on the SAT I scored:</p>

<p>M - 47
W - 57
CR - 60</p>

<p>1640/2400 overrall.</p>

<p>I was recommended Barron 2400 to boost my math up, as well as the blue book. But are there any other good study guides I should get? I heard "rocket review" or something is great for math, but what about W/CR? Prior to the May SAT, I was using the Princeton Review book which didnt help out that much. </p>

<p>Would it be a good idea to get old copies of the new SAT as well? where could i purchase these?</p>

<p>btw this would be in preperation for the oct sat
thanks</p>

<p>C'mon Guys, Help Me Out...</p>

<p>I would recommend you SAT Prep. Books from Barron and Princeton Review. Those two are the best in the market. Kaplan sucks and ...
just keep working on your weaknesses.</p>

<p>What about getting old sat tests? and rocket review?</p>

<p>Barron's 2400 for review, then just do a crap load of practice tests. Oh, and Kaplan 2400 is a good idea, too.</p>

<p>barrons 2400 is so freakin' hard... !!!</p>

<p>go and search all of this</p>

<p>RocketReview needs to be updated. It's good for writing.</p>

<p>i am not expert by any stretch of the imagination, but i really think the best study book is dependent on your style of learning. i know hearing that gets repetitive, but it is true. i had the blue book, princeton review, barrons 2400, and the barrons math workbook, and all of them helped in their own aspects. although i didnt study too much (only 2-3 weeks before the test), i still got a lot out of just skimming through princeton review the night before! it helped me narrow choices down on problems i didnt know, because realistically, i am not going to know how to solve every single problem if i didnt review more, so that helped me a tremendous amount on the june sat. </p>

<p>barrons 2400 helped with the more difficult aspects of the SAT. I would say, if you are trying to go from a 1600 or something to a 1900 princeton review or kaplan might be the most helpful (along with practice tests), but if you are aiming for the 2000+ you should definitely look into taking as many practice tests as possible along side the strategies provided in the 2400 books.</p>