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buying more than one thing? (uses Multi-Item Price Optimization™) ...or you can sell this book |
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Peter C. Brewer, Ray H Garrison, Eric Noreen
Edition: 3
ISBN: 0073048836
ISBN-13: 9780073048833
Publication Date: 2006-04-06
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 672
Editorial Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):
1) Product Description
Introduction to Managerial Accounting, 3/e by Brewer/Garrison/Noreen is based on the market-leading text, Managerial Accounting, by Garrison, Noreen and Brewer. However, this is not simply a briefer book with chapters removed; B/G/N has been rethought and retooled to meet the needs of the market. B/G/N 3/e is a more accessible, yet thoroughly student-friendly text that satisfies the basic needs of the managerial accounting student without unnecessary depth on advanced topics associated with the follow-up course, cost accounting/cost management. Faculty and students alike will find this new edition has retained the hallmark features of the Garrison brand: author-written supplements, excellent readability, terrific examples, and balanced end-of-chapter material.
Customer Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):
Average Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5
1) Don't buy the combo!! [Rating: 2 out of 5]
For this textbook I ordered it because it said that it was the paperback version, not the workbook version. I was given false information when ordering it because it gave me the opportunity to combine the paperback version with the workbook. Then they sent me two workbooks. I was tricked into buying the same book twice by semantics and a glitch in the system.2) Great book, almost the same as last edition. [Rating: 4 out of 5]
I HATE that textbook publishers print out a new edition, with basicaly the same problems as the last edition (only the numbers change). However, to be fair, this is a very clear book, has good examples that follow the exercies in the book. Probably one of the better accounting books I have seen. Also has some chapters of introduction to finance. Overall would recommend.3) Ok - not great [Rating: 3 out of 5]
This book is what I would call an o.k. textbook. It's not horribly hard to sit down & read or understand. On the other hand it's not light reading. There are some areas in later chapters that are not covered as well as I has hoped.
