Review
"...the material is well-written, it will be easy to teach from, and the students will find it easy to read and study from."
-Jackie Garner, University of Arkansas
"Jimmie and Linda Gilbert...present material at the appropriate level in a quick and concise manner....Some...texts do not develop enough mathematical sophistication to enable the transition to junior- or senior-level linear algebra courses. The Gilbert text does!"
--Melvyn Jeter, Illinois WesleyanUniversity
"The notation and terminology are clear and concise and the flow of topics and concepts is smooth."
-Ed Dixon, Tennessee Technological University
"I am...quite enthusiastic about the arrangement of topics which the Gilberts have chosen....(The Gilberts Chapter 1 plays as a sort of overture, in which the main elements of vector space theory are laid out in a comfortable space, while due attention is paid to the role of computation. I think this type of start to a course would orient the students properly toward general vector space theory, rather than having them come upon the annoying complication of vector spaces after three or more weeks spent exclusively in computation and row reduction."
-Edward Hinson, University of New Hampshire
Review
"...the material is well-written, it will be easy to teach from, and the students will find it easy to read and study from."
-Jackie Garner, University of Arkansas
"Jimmie and Linda Gilbert...present material at the appropriate level in a quick and concise manner....Some...texts do not develop enough mathematical sophistication to enable the transition to junior- or senior-level linear algebra courses. The Gilbert text does!"
--Melvyn Jeter, Illinois WesleyanUniversity
"The notation and terminology are clear and concise and the flow of topics and concepts is smooth."
-Ed Dixon, Tennessee Technological University
"I am...quite enthusiastic about the arrangement of topics which the Gilberts have chosen....(The Gilberts Chapter 1 plays as a sort of overture, in which the main elements of vector space theory are laid out in a comfortable space, while due attention is paid to the role of computation. I think this type of start to a course would orient the students properly toward general vector space theory, rather than having them come upon the annoying complication of vector spaces after three or more weeks spent exclusively in computation and row reduction."
-Edward Hinson, University of New Hampshire
See all Editorial Reviews