Which SAT prep book is most optimal?

<p>I would just like some clarification and suggestions on what SAT prep book would best prepare me for the test. I heard that
Math- Dr chungs
Writing- ??
CR- read articles and memorize vocab from Direct hits(good or bad?)
I already have the blue book so if you guys have anymore suggestions I can look into that would be great! Also, stating why a book was helpful or not would be helpful to me!
Thanks!</p>

<p>The College Board and Princeton Review have good books. Cracking the SAT is also decent. I haven’t gotten a chance to look at it yet, but College Panda recently released one about the writing section. From the previews I’ve seen it looks good. Hope that’s something to get you started anyway.</p>

<p>First of all, one of the threads that are featured above is solely made for to show newcomers the best books.
Second of all, the consensus over here about the books is
1-Writing:Erica’s ultimate guide grammar
2-Math:Know all concepts then start practicing as soon as possible.NO book will help you much in the sat as much as your Real Tests.
3-Critical:Essential 600 and Direct hits(same author).I didn’t want to purchase the essential 600, so I went to amazon and got the words from the end of the book.If you want I can give you them all ,but the problem is that they are without definitions.</p>

<p>I remember the first time I entered the test the experimental section was about a duck-rabbit illusion.I didn’t understand it quite much but after a year I ,surprisingly, get the same section. However, this time I understood it fully.</p>

<p>Last note: My sentence completion went from 11/19 to 15/19 which is quite ridiculously small.Studying vocab,though give you confidence, doesn’t help you as much as studying grammar and math rules.</p>