Category: E-Books

Advanced Calculus of a Single Variable - eBook
Sale!
Original price was: $23.74.Current price is: $5.00.
This advanced undergraduate textbook, Advanced Calculus of a Single Variable, (PDF), is centered on a one-semester course on single variable calculus that the author has been teaching at San Diego State University for several years. The goal of this classroom-tested book is to deliver a complicated discussion of the concepts
Essentials of Exercise Physiology (4th Edition) - eBook
Sale!
Original price was: $103.99.Current price is: $11.00.
Essentials of Exercise Physiology, 4th Edition, (PDF) provides a compact version of the Seventh Edition of the bestselling Exercise Physiology: Nutrition, Energy, and Human Performance, making it perfect for introductory undergraduate courses. As students progress through the textbook, they will develop a good understanding of the interrelationships among energy intake,
Mosby's Guide to Nursing Diagnosis (5th Edition) - eBook
Sale!
Original price was: $38.71.Current price is: $4.00.
Updated and easy-to-use, Mosby’s Guide to Nursing Diagnosis, 5th Edition (ePub/PDF) is ideal for use in in class, clinicals, and at the bedside! This pocket-sized reference book is a condensed version Ackley’s Nursing Diagnosis Handbook, 11th Edition that helps you diagnose and formulate care plans with confidence and ease. It
changing earth geology 7e pdf
Sale!
Original price was: $93.00.Current price is: $8.00.
The Best selling eBook, “The Changing Earth: Exploring Geology And Evolution 7th Edition”, is a member of a rare breed of textbooks written specifically for courses covering both physical and historical geology. 3 interrelated themes (organic evolution, plate tectonics, and geologic time) help college students understand that our Earth is
Unequivocal Justice (Political Philosophy for the Real World) - eBook
Sale!
Original price was: $43.99.Current price is: $7.00.
Unequivocal Justice (PDF) challenges the prevailing view within political philosophy that broadly free-market regimes are inconsistent with the basic principles of liberal egalitarian justice. Freiman argues that the liberal egalitarian rejection of free-market regimes rests on a crucial methodological mistake. Liberal egalitarians regularly assume an ideal “public interest” model of