In my experience i found cambridge to be the best book for a large portion of subjects but yeah diffrent books diffrent sections which are decent. Well here is a list of the books i used and the topics i found them useful in
Complex numbers:
Patel (great for complex)
Cambridge
Terry Lee
Conics:
Cambridge (best book you'll ever find)
Terry Lee (if you're struggling and need worked answers)
and Fitzpatrick if you want to fuck with your mind... those questions when you get past around about 17 are ridiculous.
Integration:
Cambridge (enough said)
Terry Lee (again good guide to everything)
Coroneus (100 questions at the back do them all and you should be set)
Volumes:
TEST PAPERS
Cambridge (good for methods)
Fitzpatrick (methods are slightly diffrent)
Terry Lee
Patel
I just recommend all of them since volumes is a subject where you have to use your mind a bit more and not just solve the question but complete it in the least amount of time possible, so you have to know how to take the proper slice and what not. There are multiple methods they use and they name it diffrently i.e. washer method, cylinder method and the method where they unfold the cylinder into a rectanglular prism.
Graphs:
Terry Lee (this book is the best graphing book ever, in my opinion)
Side note. Don't make your graphs look pretty or anything aim for efficency, two straight lines label the axis and the origin mark and mark any noteworthy points.
Mechanics:
Patel(has an extraneous section)
Cambridge(slightly difficult)
Terry Lee(if you're lost)
Polynomials:
Terry Lee
Patel
Harder 3U:
Terry Lee ( i liked it cause harder 3u was my worst subject and this explained Perms and combs as well as harder binomial really well)
Cambridge (for the circles very nice circles)
All in all the 2 essential books i think you can't do without would be
Terry Lee (covers everything in full detail with worked solutions, the worked solutions were always a saviour.)
Cambridge (it'll take you a while getting used to, don't beleive all the crap that people say about how it's too difficult and dosn't cover everything in full detail. I beleived that when i first started 4u and didn't buy it until just before trials, and boy how wrong were my preconceived notions.)
The best practice you can ever get is PAST PAPERS, if you do enough of these you can beat anyone, there used to be a site where they had hundreds of papers from numeous schools but i can't find it anymore. Well good luck and if you fail your school marks dw ( i got 90 school mark and still ended up with 96 exam mark)
Complex numbers:
Patel (great for complex)
Cambridge
Terry Lee
Conics:
Cambridge (best book you'll ever find)
Terry Lee (if you're struggling and need worked answers)
and Fitzpatrick if you want to fuck with your mind... those questions when you get past around about 17 are ridiculous.
Integration:
Cambridge (enough said)
Terry Lee (again good guide to everything)
Coroneus (100 questions at the back do them all and you should be set)
Volumes:
TEST PAPERS
Cambridge (good for methods)
Fitzpatrick (methods are slightly diffrent)
Terry Lee
Patel
I just recommend all of them since volumes is a subject where you have to use your mind a bit more and not just solve the question but complete it in the least amount of time possible, so you have to know how to take the proper slice and what not. There are multiple methods they use and they name it diffrently i.e. washer method, cylinder method and the method where they unfold the cylinder into a rectanglular prism.
Graphs:
Terry Lee (this book is the best graphing book ever, in my opinion)
Side note. Don't make your graphs look pretty or anything aim for efficency, two straight lines label the axis and the origin mark and mark any noteworthy points.
Mechanics:
Patel(has an extraneous section)
Cambridge(slightly difficult)
Terry Lee(if you're lost)
Polynomials:
Terry Lee
Patel
Harder 3U:
Terry Lee ( i liked it cause harder 3u was my worst subject and this explained Perms and combs as well as harder binomial really well)
Cambridge (for the circles very nice circles)
All in all the 2 essential books i think you can't do without would be
Terry Lee (covers everything in full detail with worked solutions, the worked solutions were always a saviour.)
Cambridge (it'll take you a while getting used to, don't beleive all the crap that people say about how it's too difficult and dosn't cover everything in full detail. I beleived that when i first started 4u and didn't buy it until just before trials, and boy how wrong were my preconceived notions.)
The best practice you can ever get is PAST PAPERS, if you do enough of these you can beat anyone, there used to be a site where they had hundreds of papers from numeous schools but i can't find it anymore. Well good luck and if you fail your school marks dw ( i got 90 school mark and still ended up with 96 exam mark)