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Book reviews for "Davis,_Thomas_Joseph" sorted by average review score:

Intermediate Accounting (Irwin Series in Undergraduate Accounting)
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill/Irwin (1995)
Authors: Thomas R. Dyckman, Roland E. Dukes, and Charles Joseph Davis
Amazon base price: $43.15
Used price: $4.99
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Wordy and heavy
I have been using this book for an Intermediate Accounting class that I have to take as a pre requisite for a Master's degree. Even though the book is quite complete in explaining accounting principles it is unecessarily wordy and extremely heavy.

The first five chapters (220 pages) provide a review of what accounting is, the accounting information system, the income statement and the balance sheet. Most of the what is written here is either too basic or will be later found in the remaining chapters of the book. These pages could be easily removed without sacrificing the remaining contents and the understanding of accounting.

Later chapters, however, are also wordy and take too much time explaining concepts that could readily be understood in a couple of lines. You end up getting tired of reading the same thing again and again.

In the end, we have to pay the price for so many pages. With 1300 + pages this book is the heaviest one I have ever carried around. Many people in my class have to use a wheeled backpack. I sometimes can't understand the fascination of editors in the US for such heavy books. If you go to Europe, Asia, and South America, books are usually thinner and much, much lighter.

I would recommend the book to be offered in a CD Rom (or e text) format. Carriyng my laptop around makes more sense than carrying the book.

Accounting can sound less confusing than explained here
This book for undergraduate accounting classes at the junior level was more confusing to me than the comparable book by Kieso et al. The sequence of the chapters is not entirely logical. More advanced concepts seem to be covered towards the beginning whereas some basic chapters are discussed towards the end of the book. It was especially confusing when not covering the chapter in chronological order - too bad that my class's syllabus was not outlined according to this book's chapter sequence. In a different class - when we used Intermediate Accounting by Kieso - jumping back and forth was not a big problem. This book by Spiceland also seemed to be very wordy. Studying by solving problems at the end of the book seemed to work. However, it is more important to know how your teacher designs the quizzes and exams and then study accordingly. On the CD that comes with it, there is a lot of ballast. The quizzes are the only valuable thing, I felt. There is not really a lot of use complaining about its weight - accounting books always seem to be extremely heavy and pricy. But this certainly holds true for this one as well!!! When I tried to resell the book at the university bookstore, they would not take it back because it was selling badly on a national scale. Very frustrating when you paid [$$$] just a couple of months earlier...

boring
This book put me to sleep. It is a very bland book. This is based on the volume one edition chapters 1-14.


A Mind at a Time
Published in Paperback by Touchstone Books (07 January, 2003)
Author: Mel Levine
Amazon base price: $11.20
List price: $14.00 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $4.75
Buy one from zShops for: $16.99
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One of Freedom's Finest Hours
Published in Hardcover by Hillsdale College Press (01 May, 2002)
Authors: Douglas A. Jeffrey, Joseph H. Alexander, Stephen E. Ambrose, Thomas H. Conner, Martin Gilbert, Victor Davis Hanson, Frederick W. Kagan, John Lukacs, Herbert Romerstein, and Gerhard L. Weinberg
Amazon base price: $25.00
Used price: $19.97
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