#13 in Organic chemistry books
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Reddit mentions of Designing Organic Syntheses: A Programmed Introduction to the Synthon Approach

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Designing Organic Syntheses: A Programmed Introduction to the Synthon Approach. Here are the top ones.

Designing Organic Syntheses: A Programmed Introduction to the Synthon Approach
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Found 3 comments on Designing Organic Syntheses: A Programmed Introduction to the Synthon Approach:

u/elnombre91 · 6 pointsr/chemistry

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Organic-Synthesis-Disconnection-Stuart-Warren/dp/0470712368

I think this is the one I have, it's definitely by Warren anyway.

Edit:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Designing-Organic-Syntheses-Programmed-Introduction/dp/0471996122

This is the one I have, you might have to shop around to find it a bit cheaper. I think I ended up with the Indian edition or something.

u/Don_Tom · 3 pointsr/chemistry

Also this one is pretty nice since you can work through it from the beginning to the end and afterwards you'll understand retrosynthesis.

You can find pdfs of it on the internet.

u/EFFENN · 1 pointr/chemistry

Organic Chemistry by John McMurray is very very good if you haven't got it already, I had this before I got Clayden and I found it a little easier when starting off.

Also, if you feel like a challenge a great question book to get is: Designing Organic Synthesis by Stuart Warren. It's a question text book that teaches you how to break down large molecules into easily synthesizable subunits and is invaluble for any synthetic course.