Chemistry (3rd edn)
Rob Lewis and Wynne Evans
Basingstoke: Palgrave 2006 | Pp464 | £22.99 | ISBN 0 230 00011 8
Reviewed by Hal Sosabowski
This book is one of the Foundation series published by Palgrave. The series aims to provide complete yet concise coverage of core topics in a particular discipline, and this text does just that for chemistry by offering a generic course in chemical literacy for non-specialists.

This is a comprehensive introductory undergraduate text covering all the essentials required for a foundation chemistry course. Interestingly, in this third edition the text also gets fairly applied inasmuch as there is a new section on forensic chemistry. This approach may seem slightly incongruous upon first inspection; a general, foundation chemistry book with a chapter on applied chemistry but I found it works well.
The text is enhanced by the inclusion of many interesting asides, designed to encourage students to dip into the book. I found the small case studies such as Was Napoleon murdered?, Lewis and Pauling, and Extraction of caffeine by SFC riveting.
There is a companion website to the book, which is probably expected in this age. The site includes appendices, a Periodic Table, a link to 'miscellaneous resources' and a collection of six case studies which cover a whole spectrum of relevant topics (enzymes, haemoglobin, the hydrogen economy, spectroscopy and astronomy, unusual alkanes and landfill). These are particularly absorbing, and on several occasions I have found myself becoming engrossed in the fascinating science described.
This new edition of Chemistry has a second colour throughout to enhance its appearance. The semi-monochrome diagrams often offer stark, uncluttered clarity and focus. The price at £22.99 wouldn't put me off buying the book. However, in the current, overcrowded undergraduate chemistry textbook market I wonder if the absence of full colour might cause this otherwise excellent book to be overlooked.
