I know that every Princeton Review guide has its fair share of typos, but it’s really difficult to take a book about essay composition seriously when it is as rife with errors as this one was (particularly when the most poorly edited chapter appears to be the one discussing grammar and punctuation).
The sample essays are helpful for getting an idea of the themes other applicants have chosen to cover, and it is interesting to look over their stats (MCAT and GPA) and personal statements and then to review which schools they applied to, what the schools’ admissions decisions were, and where the applicants ended up matriculating. However, the beginning of the chapter featuring the sample personal statements contains a disclaimer in which Princeton Review asserts that they are not responsible for the editing of the essays; in order to provide readers with an accurate picture of the admissions process, all personal statements are printed exactly as they were received by the schools’ admissions committees. This would be all well and good, except that the rest of the book is so poorly edited, how am I to trust that all the errors evident in the essays were actually made by the students who wrote them? This book was interesting, but I would take it with a very large grain of salt.