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I received a full score on the SAT, and purchased and reviewed every book that ever included the term SAT, ranging from Princeton, Kaplan, REA, ARCO, College Board, McGraw, Thomson...you name it.
Of all these books the Gruber's Preparation for the SAT is the best book of them all. It includes 4-6 sample tests, hundreds of review questions for each section, covering math, vocab, comprehension, etc.. It is not aimed at "cracking," and instead focuses on providing a detailed, general knowledge that you can use on the test, but also keep for life.
I liked the vocab section, which is a list of 3400 potential SAT terms. Every time I took the SAT (3 times) there were obscure terms I had not seen in any other book. But since I memorized every vocabulary word from the Gruber's list (over a course of 1.5 years), I knew them all, and swept through the test. The Gruber's list is comprehensive, and includes every word the testmakers have and will include in their tests. It is the best book out there, and the only one authored by a single writer (a P.h.D).
Trust me on this one.
P.S. While I took both the new and old SATs, I studied the Gruber's vocab of the old edition for the new SAT as well. I am not sure whether it released one for the new test, but it still worked like a charm for me.
The Princeton review publishes a book called "Cracking the SAT", which is the best SAT prep book I've seen. It includes all 3 sections, great list of SAT vocab, and practice tests.
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