Raven, Biology puts an emphasis on evolution and scientific inquiry have made this a leading textbook for students majoring in biology. This emphasis on the organizing power of evolution is combined with an integration of the importance of cellular, molecular biology and genomics to offer our readers a text that is both student-friendly and current. Contents -- Table of content Part I The Molecular Basis of Life 1 The Science of Biology 2 The Nature of Molecules and the Properties of Water 3 The Chemical Building Blocks of Life Part II Biology of the Cell 4 Cell Structure 5 Membranes 6 Energy and Metabolism 7 How Cells Harvest Energy 8 Photosynthesis 9 Cell Communication 10 How Cells Divide Part III Genetic and Molecular Biology 11 Sexual Reproduction and Meiosis 12 Patterns of Inheritance 13 Chromosomes, Mapping and the Meiosis—Inheritance Connection 14 The Genetic Material 15 Genes and How They Work 16 Control of Gene Expression 17 Biotechnology 18 Genomics 19 Cellular Mechanisms of Development Part IV Evolution 20 Genes Within Populations 21 The Evidence for Evolution 22 The Origin of Species 23 Systematics, Phylogenetics, and Comparative Biology 24 Genome Evolution Part V Diversity of Life on Earth 25 Origin and Diversity of Life 26 Viruses 27 Prokaryotes 28 Protists 29 Seedless Plants 30 Seed Plants 31 Fungi 32 Animal Diversity & the Evolution of Body Plans 33 Protostomes 34 Deuterostomes Part VI Plant Form and Function 35 Plant Form 36 Transport in Plants 37 Plant Nutrition and Soils 38 Plant Defense Responses 39 Sensory Systems in Plants 40 Plant Reproduction Part VII Animal Form and Function 41 The Animal Body and Principles of Regulation 42 The Nervous System 43 Sensory Systems 44 The Endocrine System 45 The Musculoskeletal System 46 The Digestive System 47 The Respiratory System 48 The Circulatory System 49 Osmotic Regulation and the Urinary System 50 The Immune System 51 The Reproductive Systems 52 Animal Development Part VIII Ecology and Behavior 53 Behavioral Biology 54 Ecology of Individuals and Populations 55 Community Ecology 56 Dynamics of Ecosystems 57 The Biosphere and Human Impacts 58 Conservation Biology
Overall, this was an okay text. I read it not for a course but to update my personal knowledge of the subject originally gained in the 1970s and only supplemented in a piecemeal fashion.
A problem: The authors/ editors do not seem to have a consistent view of their audience, which seems a problem for a textbook. Some parts of the book are moderately challenging, requiring one to bring to active use material learned in earlier chapters; this is particularly so in the coverage of biochemistry and cytology.
Another inconsistency, not unrelated to the first, is in the rigor of the science. For example, the chapters on ecology seemed more loosely reasoned then the book's earlier chapters. My retained knowledge gained from Scientific American articles and from economics showed up gaps in these chapters.
Finally the tone was inconsistent, ranging from dispassionately descriptive to preachy.
Minor point: the glossary needs expansion. It misses terms, not common outside the field, that are used in widely separated parts of the text.
Enjoyable to read and has been a useful reference/refresher when needed. Very large quantity of information covered. Goes into a good amount of depth for an introductory textbook, but stopped before I felt bogged down or overwhelmed.
I've only gotten through the first portion of this book, using it as teaching material, so take my rating and review with a grain of salt. I'm finished with it for the foreseeable future though so marking as complete. This is a very comprehensive and detailed biology text that does a fantastic job of laying out intro information and then going one step further into that subject's processes. It might be a bit too detailed for someone's first glimpse at these subjects, but is ideal for someone who has had an intro and wants a bit more, or someone revisiting these subjects after a long break away from the material to keep it interesting.
Pre-read/use: I thought the previous edition of this book was pretty good. I think this book should be largely similar to the previous edition, but with some better instructor resources. I'm going to ask my students to rate it at the end of the semester and I'll post their rating here with my review.
Post-read/use: Still good. Not as many updates as I thought there would be. The publisher caught me on this one.
A fantastic textbook that explains biology in terms of time, energy, evolution, behaviour and ecosystem. The scope is utterly amazing. A good teacher should be able to take this book and show how life scales from the single-cell to the biosphere for each of the many physiological processes we depend on.
This book was really comprehensive. It covered a lot of different areas of study in biology. I used it for two classes and have read just about all of it. The graphics are helpful in explaining concepts. I liked that there were quizzes at the end of each chapter with answers in the back of the book. The topics were explained in such a way that somebody new to biology or someone who hasn't studied it in a long time (like myself) can understand it. The book also goes in depth on many topics so even someone versed in this field of study will be able to learn something.