by ohthatpatrick Wed Nov 27, 2019 3:21 pm
Hey, there.
This book isn't meant to be a standalone guide. If you're not already familiar with how Manhattan (or any other company) symbolizes rules for Logic Games, then the answers will definitely seem like "Okaaaaay, how should I have known you'd do it that way?"
In short, if this book is your first book for LSAT Prep, it's probably going to have a lot of moments that are like, "What are we talking about? Was I supposed to know that from somewhere?"
This book is full of drills that are meant to give students lots of repetition at applying what they've already learned from strategy guides / classes.
It sounds like you may be coming at it too soon in your LSAT learning process. You should probably either purchase a Games strategy guide (from Manhattan, ideally, if you want the symbolization to match that in this book .... but any testprep company's Games strategy guide will teach you stuff that's mostly the same).
You could also watch free YouTube or Khan Academy videos that attempt to teach students ways to diagram / symbolize games.
Hope this helps.