A companion guide to college Biology, Chemistry, and Physics. Every chapter is three to four pages — designed to read before you study a topic to know what you're about to encounter, and again after to confirm what mattered.
Biology, Chemistry, and Physics — the full set, designed as a single visual library to live on your shelf.
Pre-med, pre-engineering, pre-PT, pre-dental — every track that opens a real career on the other side of college runs through the same handful of intro science classes. Pass them and the door stays open. Don't, and the path you came here for closes.
These classes are rigorous by design. They cover a lot of ground in a single term, and they reward students who arrive with a strong high-school science foundation. Students coming in cold often need a second pass to internalize the material.
Don't Weed Me Out is a companion guide — designed to sit alongside your textbook and lectures, not replace them. A second voice in plain language, for the moments when one explanation isn't enough.
From cells to ecology in 55 chapters. The cells, the molecules, the inheritance, the evolution, the diversity, the physiology. Every core topic in introductory biology, distilled into clear, concise explanations a student can read in an afternoon.
General Chemistry through Organic. 62 chapters from atoms and moles all the way through retrosynthesis. Notoriously dense material, presented one concept at a time with the analogies and patterns that make it stick.
Mechanics through thermodynamics. 46 chapters covering kinematics, Newton's laws, energy, momentum, oscillation, electromagnetism, waves, optics, and entropy. Each topic introduced with intuition first, then the math — built for students seeing this material for the first time.
The format is the product. Each chapter follows the same nine-element rhythm — designed to be read once before you study a topic so you know what you're about to encounter, then again after to lock in what mattered. The cheat sheet at element 07 is yours to carry into the exam.
From Volume I — Biology, Chapter 21. The full chapter runs about three pages. This is what the start of one looks like.
Meiosis takes one cell with two copies of every chromosome and turns it into four cells with one copy each — so when sperm and egg meet, you don't end up with double the DNA.
You and your sibling each grab one card from every pair in a deck before passing the deck on. Two of you split the deck so the next two players can split it again. That's meiosis — chromosomes get halved on purpose so that fertilization adds back to a normal hand.
Unit One of all three volumes. Bio. Chem. Physics. Fifteen chapters delivered to your inbox in under a minute. If the voice doesn't land for you, don't buy. Simple as that.
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The whole digital library, lifetime access. Or a single paperback to keep on your desk.
Biology, Chemistry, and Physics. 163 chapters. Web reader, PDF download, lifetime access, free updates forever.
A single subject as a paperback. Ships from Amazon and Barnes & Noble. A clear, well-designed companion guide for your shelf.