Cutting-edge research and innovative science...   
PROGRESS in Inorganic Chemistry
  Hailed by professional chemists as an index of the most  influential and current research being done in inorganic chemistry,  Progress in Inorganic Chemistry has also enjoyed the reputation as  an indispensable working reference. Featuring the work of  internationally renowned chemists, this newest volume provides a  clear, authoritative examination of each critical new advance and  innovative development in inorganic chemistry today.
  "This series is distinguished not only by its scope and breadth,  but also by the depth and quality of the reviews."--Journal of  the American Chemical Society
  "This series is a valuable addition to the library of the  practicing research chemist, and is a good starting point for  students wishing to understand modern inorganic  chemistry."--Canadian Chemical News
  "[This series] has won a deservedly honored place on the  bookshelf of the chemist attempting to keep afloat in the torrent  of original papers on inorganic chemistry."--Chemistry in  Britain
  CONTENTS OF VOLUME 43
    - Oxovanadium and Oxomolybdenum Clusters and Solids Incorporating  Oxygen-Donor Ligands (M. Ishaque Kahn, Illinois Institute of  Technology, and Jon Zubieta, Syracuse University)
   - The Application of Polychalcogenide Salts to the Exploratory  Synthesis of Solid State Multinary Chalcogenides at Intermediate  Temperatures (Mercouri G. Kanatzidis and Anthony C. Sutorik,  Michigan State University)
   - Mechanistic and Kinetic Aspects of Transition Metal Oxygen  Chemistry (Andreja Bakac, Iowa State University)
   - The Chemistry of Metal Complexes with Selenolate and  Tellurolate Ligands (John Arnold, University of California,  Berkeley)
   - Coordination Chemistry with Sterically Hindered Hydrotris  (pyrazolyl) borate Ligands: Organometallic and Bioinorganic  Perspectives (Nobumasa Kitajima, Tokyo Institute of Technology, and  William B. Tolman, University of Minnesota)
   - Metal Complexes of Calixarenes (D. Max Roundhill, Tulane  University)