Until you’ve consumed all of the best Pre Med books, can you even claim to be a true fan?
- Your White Coat is Waiting: Vital Advice for Pre-Meds (2019)
- The Premed Playbook Guide to the Medical School Interview: Be Prepared, Perform Well, Get Accepted (2017)
- Medical Terminology: The Best and Most Effective Way to Memorize, Pronounce and Understand Medical Terms: Second Edition (2016)
- Getting into Medical School For Dummies (2013)
- Insider’s Pre-Med Guidebook: Advice from admissions faculty at America’s top medical schools (2015)
- The Pre-Med Survival Guide: A Complete Guide to College for the Future Physician (2015)
- The Premed Playbook: Guide to the Medical School Personal Statement: Write Your Best Story. Secure Your Interview. (2018)
- So, You Want to Be a Physician: Getting an Edge in the Pursuit of Becoming a Physician or Other Medical Professional (2018)
- Med School Confidential: A Complete Guide to the Medical School Experience: By Students, for Students (2006)
- The Pre-Med Bible: Effective Strategies and Practical Tips for Success with Medical School Admissions (2012)
- Med School Uncensored: The Insider’s Guide to Surviving Admissions, Exams, Residency, and Sleepless Nights in the Call Room (2017)
Your White Coat is Waiting: Vital Advice for Pre-Meds (2019)
“I want to be a doctor.” Whether this has been your lifelong dream or is an option you have recently started considering, it is important to understand what it takes to become a competitive applicant for medical school. As a pre-med, you have to be strategic and make good decisions during all phases of your path towards becoming a physician. As a pre-med advisor who previously worked at Johns Hopkins University and Franklin & Marshall College (Kirsten Kirby) and a physician (Dr.
The Premed Playbook Guide to the Medical School Interview: Be Prepared, Perform Well, Get Accepted (2017)
The Premed Playbook: Guide to the Medical School Interview is the only book needed to prepare premed students for their medical school interviews. It covers traditional interviews as well as the multiple mini-interview or MMI. Through interviews with Admissions Committee members and others, Dr. Gray has compiled the most comprehensive book on this subject. Premed students want to know what to expect, but more importantly, they need to see examples of what successful applicants have done.
Medical Terminology: The Best and Most Effective Way to Memorize, Pronounce and Understand Medical Terms: Second Edition (2016)
Medical Terminology Let’s be very clear about this, if you want to feel proud of yourself and do a great job in the health care field, you need to learn and understand medical terminology! It is a fundamental part of the future of your career.
Getting into Medical School For Dummies (2013)
Getting accepted to medical school is a long and rigorous process and many students find they need help. If you’re one of these students, Getting into Medical School For Dummies is the perfect tool to help you through the process and realize your dream. By providing you with concise information about preparing for and applying to medical school, Getting into Medical School For Dummies prepares you for the application process.
Insider’s Pre-Med Guidebook: Advice from admissions faculty at America’s top medical schools (2015)
What does it take to get into medical school? For the first time, admissions committee members from elite medical schools in the United States share their perspectives and unique insights on how the selection process works and how decisions are made as to who gets in and who does not—and you will be surprised. This book gives an unprecedented insiders’ perspective from those who have actually made the final decisions.
The Pre-Med Survival Guide: A Complete Guide to College for the Future Physician (2015)
The difficulties of medical school are well known, but little has been written on what comes before medical school: the four years of college as a pre-med. In this essential guide, medical school acceptee and graduating pre-med Tyler Scaff explores all facets of life as a college student, and especially as one who plans on applying to medical school.
The Premed Playbook: Guide to the Medical School Personal Statement: Write Your Best Story. Secure Your Interview. (2018)
The Premed Playbook: Guide to the Medical School Personal Statement helps guide students in crafting their stories for the medical school Admission Committees. It’s not only a collection of essays from students who got into top schools, but is a showcase of essays that started badly and were honed to tell great stories.
So, You Want to Be a Physician: Getting an Edge in the Pursuit of Becoming a Physician or Other Medical Professional (2018)
2018 Edition The journey to becoming a medical professional is laden with a variety of challenges, including acing your personal statement in the application, knowing about new interview techniques such as the Multiple Mini Interview (MMI) and CASPer, and impressing medical school staff during the interview.
Med School Confidential: A Complete Guide to the Medical School Experience: By Students, for Students (2006)
Med School Confidential from Robert H. Miller and Daniel M. Bissell uses the same chronological format and mentor-based system that have made Law School Confidential and Business School Confidential such treasured and popular guides.
The Pre-Med Bible: Effective Strategies and Practical Tips for Success with Medical School Admissions (2012)
An indispensable guide for getting into medical school, this book offers effective strategies and practical tips on all the essential topics, including: GPA-boosting strategies, study methods, extracurricular activities, mastering the MCAT, letters of recommendation, completing applications, interview preparation, and what to do after interviews.
Med School Uncensored: The Insider’s Guide to Surviving Admissions, Exams, Residency, and Sleepless Nights in the Call Room (2017)
Cardiothoracic anesthesiologist and recent med school grad Dr. Richard Beddingfield serves as an unofficial older brother for pre-med and incoming med students–dishing on all the stuff he would’ve wanted to know from the beginning in order to make the most of med school’s opportunities, while staying sane through the gauntlets of applying to and succeeding at med school, residency, fellowship, and starting work as a new physician.
Best Pre Med Books: The Ultimate List
We highly recommend you to buy all paper or e-books in a legal way, for example, on Amazon. But sometimes it might be a need to dig deeper beyond the shiny book cover. Before making a purchase, you can visit resources like Library Genesis and download some pre med books mentioned below at your own risk. Once again, we do not host any illegal or copyrighted files, but simply give our visitors a choice and hope they will make a wise decision.
Dear Preston : doing business with our hearts
Author(s): Preston Bailey
ID: 877099, Publisher: PB Media , Year: [2013], Size: 1 Mb, Format: pdf
Water My Soul: Ninety Meditations from an Old Order Mennonite
Author(s): Darla Weaver
ID: 2323503, Publisher: Herald Press, Year: 5 Sept 2017, Size: 2 Mb, Format: epub
Code Blue: Inside America’s Medical Industrial Complex
Author(s): Mike Magee
ID: 2446244, Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press, Year: 4 Jun 2019, Size: 2 Mb, Format: epub
Please note that this booklist is not errorless. Some books are truly hot items according to Washington Post, others are drafted by unknown authors. On top of that, you can always find additional tutorials and courses on Coursera, Udemy or edX, for example. Are there any other relevant links you could recommend? Drop a comment if you have any feedback on the list.