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Microbe


by Moselio Schaechter, John L. Ingraham, Frederick C. Neidhardt

List Price: $89.95
Price: $80.95
You Save: $9.00 (10%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 439462
Studio: ASM Press
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 534
Publication Date: November 30, 2005
Publisher: ASM Press


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
Microbe, a brand-new, general microbiology textbook intended for upper-division undergraduate courses, is an exciting introduction to the world of microbes. With a distinct ecological and evolutionary orientation, Microbe invites readers to partake of the most current advances in the field. Written by prominent scientists with practical teaching, textbook writing, and research experience, this new textbook will engage students in the learning process with its clear, reader-friendly style and unique perspective of the field. Microbe is paradigm-driven rather than fact-driven. Key concepts are illustrated by inspiring examples that convey the excitement of the field. This is not a compendium of facts, but rather a textbook in the older, traditional sense: a book that can be used for studying rather than for looking up factual information. The book is divided into seven sections covering the most pertinent information related to the study of microbes, including microbial activity; structure and function; growth, inheritance, physiology, and diversity; and biological interactions. Each chapter concludes with thought-provoking study questions, for which answers are listed in the back of the book.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 5 reviews)

An Interesting Introduction  
Reading the previous reviews, it is evident that each reviewer's rating directly reflected what they had been seeking in this book. Any textbook that attempts to cover the field of microbiology is destined to be "superficial." The terrain is vast, including all three domains of life as well as the viruses. In this case, the authors intention, as stated in the preface, was to emphasize concepts and to provide an interesting introduction to the field in a book of moderate length. They have indeed done that. If every college student, whatever their major field of study, understood the microbial world as presented in this book, we would be able to collectively make better choices in many areas which affect the well-being of our species and the planet, including medicine, agriculture, and resource management. And we would feel more at home on this living Earth.
February 20, 2007

Very readable  
I used this textbook as the basis for my Microbiology course this year as it presents core concepts in very readable language. I supplemented it with more specific, in depth reading and lectures on specific topics associated with each chapter. My students loved the book (though they hated the price!). This is not the typical encyclopedic microbiology text we are used to seeing and thank goodness!
February 16, 2007

Good For Undergrads, Better For the Author's Bank Accounts  
This book is really simple and it does a good job at explaining some of the basics. I used it as a foundation book in a grad-level class (as a reference for some basic concepts) and it seemed to work well. Just don't expect it to go into great detail about any one topic. Each chapter on metabolism or genetics could easily be a full semester on its own.


This thing is expensive and it isn't worth the money. The website is just links to external sites with papers and crude cartoons to explain concepts. These authors are making money hand over fist on rehashing basic concepts-welcome to college!

An average book that loses one star for costing way more than it needs to.
December 30, 2006

horrible, horrible textbook  
I had to buy this book for a microbiology class, and I've now resorted to trying to supplement all the assigned readings with bits of last year's textbook borrowed from a friend. First, this book is very superficial - it doesn't have a serious amount of information on anything. It looks like a book for children compared to the old, traditional textbook. There is a graphic in the margins suggesting the reader visit a website for supplemental info every few pages, but I shouldn't have to be sitting at a computer to read a textbook. There are 3 inches of blank margin, why didn't they just print the information there? It wouldn't be "cutting-edge" enough?
Further, I hope the previous reviewer didn't try too hard to learn molecular bio from this, because it's riddled with errors. Our prof told us to cross out a whole page of fueling diagrams because they were so wrong it was beyond saving. Another page shows glycolysis making ATP in the first step (that's way more awesome than that old-fashioned glycolysis cycle I learned last year in biochem!) Another page says reduction when it means oxidation. Another page miscategorizes Pseudomonas as a hydrogen bacteria. And that's all in chapter 6 alone! There are also constant grammar and punctuation errors, which are inexcusable and distracting, but not as scary as all the wrong info.
November 29, 2006

A clearly written introduction to metabolism of microbes and microbes in general  
The first chapters slowly introduce the reader to the world of microbes. They can quickly be read without a great effort. The central chapters on fueling, biosynthesis and building of macromolecules are clearly written with plenty of figures to support the text. I particularly like the clear presentation on how energy is trapped during phosphorylation. For someone not verse in molecular biology this is a clear approach to comprehend more complex metabolic pathways. There are many other chapters I have not covered. Many pointers to further information on the web is provided throughout the book. The authors even took the trouble to set a website for the book with even more info. I borrowed a copy from a friend (Ron!) -- I should probably get my own copy...
March 08, 2006


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

A Photographic Atlas for the Microbiology Laboratory
by Michael J. Leboffe, Burton E. Pierce

Molecular Cell Biology
by Harvey Lodish, Arnold Berk, Chris A. Kaiser, Monty Krieger, Matthew P. Scott, Anthony Bretscher, Hidde Ploegh, Paul Matsudaira

Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, Fourth Edition
by David L. Nelson, Michael M. Cox

Viruses vs. Superbugs: A Solution to the Antibiotics Crisis?
by Thomas Hausler

The Killers Within: The Deadly Rise of Drug-Resistant Bacteria
by Michael Shnayerson, Mark J. Plotkin

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