Writing Reaction Mechanisms in Organic Chemistry, Third Edition is an invaluable guide to understanding the movements of atoms and electrons in the reactions of organic molecules. Expanding on the successful book by Miller and Solomon, this new edition further enhances your understanding of reactions. The whole book has been extensively revised with new material including a completely new chapter. To further aid understanding, all illustrations have been redrawn with the use of color to clearly indicate how each reaction works. This book illustrates that understanding organic reactions is based on applying general principles rather than memorizing unrelated processes. This approach helps you understand that writing mechanisms is a practical method of applying knowledge of previously encountered reactions and reaction conditions to new reactions. After simply explaining basic principles, this book then examines each type of reaction. A clear background and explanation is provided for each reaction, followed by an example of the reaction in use. At the end of each section is a series of problems, with a wider range of challenging questions, to test your understanding of the mechanism, with answers to check that you are right. Students and research chemists alike will find this revised book useful to organize what may seem an overwhelming quantity of information into a set of simple general principles and guidelines for determining and describing organic reaction mechanisms.Extensively rewritten and reorganized with a completely new chapter on oxidation and reduction reactions including stereochemical reactionsEssential for those who need to have mechanisms explained in greater detail than most organic chemistry textbooks provideNow illustrated with hundreds of colorful chemical structures to help you understand reaction processes more easilyNew and extended problem sets and answers to help you understand the general principles and how to apply this to real applicationsNew information boxes throughout the text to provide useful background to reactions and the people behind the discovery of a reaction