What books did you find the most productive...?

in CCNA & CCENT
I have now read 2 books on getting certification one by Paul Browning and one by Chris Bryant and have not found them to be productive learning tools, I have recently started reading one of Wendell Odom's book and it seems to be a little easier and more in depth in a manner that is easy to understand, what books have you found to be productive in your studies?
Current Lab: 4 C2950 WS, 1 C2950G EI, 3 1841, 2 2503, Various Modules, Parts and Pieces. Dell Power Edge 1850, Dell Power Edge 1950.
Comments
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VinnyCisco Member Posts: 176
I used the Lammle CCNA study guide when I was going for CCNA. He did have some mistakes in it, but it was still very good.
Now using Odom's book for CCNP Route.
I also found that the lab book put out from Certificationkits.com was a good reference for building labs if you have equipment. Works good for GNS3 and Packet Tracer as well.
And of course the Internet is a great source of reading."Failure is the prerequisite of Success" - V. G. -
shyguyIT Member Posts: 380
I used Odom's books as my main source of study and Lammle's book for review. Was able to pass both ICND1 and ICND2 on my first try using these books.2017 Goals:
Route[X], Switch [], TSHOOT[] -
cpartin Member Posts: 84 ■■□□□□□□□□
Only book I used was Odom. Supplemented with the free INE CCNA videos and labbing on GNS3 + real switches. -
subsooner711 Member Posts: 40 ■■□□□□□□□□
Used a combination of both Lammle and Odom. I prefer Lammle's book -
Jon_Cisco Member Posts: 1,772 ■■■■■■■■□□
This is a great question simply because it is a question we all have to deal with at some point.
I always like two sources of information so I usually try to pick up two books on the same subject.
Unfortunately I have not been able to keep up on my reading so I can't give great feedback on which authors were better for me. I read Odem's ICND1 as review and it did a good job. I am not sure how I would feel if it was my first exposure to the material. Labbing is what really ties the information together for me but at some point you need to read a book to get exposure to all of the concepts.
I have Odem's ICND2 book but I have decided I don't have time to read it this summer. I am going to attempt the exam next week having used Netacademy classes and watched CBT Nuggets videos. If this proves to be a $150 mistake I will change my schedule and make time for reading.
I really chimed in here because after reading ICND1 I felt like I would have struggled to pass the exam if that was my only exposure to the material. -
NetEsoon Member Posts: 26 ■□□□□□□□□□
I read Odom's book as a first source, it is pretty good and it goes in detail, now I'm watching CBT nuggets, and I'm also following Paul Browning's book (CCNA in 60 days), I gotta say, the layout of the book is good, however there are many many mistakes within the labs and even grammatical errors, that sometimes makes me doubt about it, I also got Boson Netsim as well as the practice test, so far the labs are good, I like the way they are presented as they force you to try to make them from memory instead of telling you exactly what to do, I haven't done the practice test yet, but I have heard that it is very good. -
jvrlopez Member Posts: 913 ■■■■□□□□□□
Lammle's Sybex books (the CCNA composite study guide and CCNA commands) were great. The labs were easy to follow and configure and I liked his writing style.And so you touch this limit, something happens and you suddenly can go a little bit further. With your mind power, your determination, your instinct, and the experience as well, you can fly very high. ~Ayrton Senna