answer:I am SO glad you asked this because I am shaking in my boots about the GRE General and English Literature Subject that I am supposed to be studying for (I take them in September and October, respectively.) At this point, I am scrambling for tips and literally forcing myself to crack open the study guide and whip out the flashcards. A few months ago, I purchased The Princeton Review: Cracking the GRE study guide for the General Test. The math section covers arithmetic, Algebra, and a smidgen of Geometry (no proofs – thank goodness.) It shouldn’t be too bad, unless you found these math courses difficult when you first studied them. Even so, I would definitely recommend that you refresh your memory (I’ll dig through my bookmarks and pull up websites that have practice questions in a bit.) There should be full-length practice exams available online, but I haven’t looked for them yet. The book that I purchased allows me to take two full practice exams through the publisher’s website. For English, the biggest thing you can do to prepare is study vocabulary. I’ve made tons of flashcards and study them whenever I’m not doing anything else (nothing major, just flicking through the words.) A good website that feels more like a game than study time is FreeRice.com – there’s also the added benefit of donations made by studying :) I’ve yet to take the exam myself, but have heard that it is fairly difficult (if you have taken the SATs, I was told this exam is that on steroids.) It’s not so much that they ask you impossible questions, but the way they phrase the questions, and the answer choices they provide, are written with the intention of confusing you. When you take the exam, make sure to read the question, read each answer, and be wary (and make use of the scratch paper they will provide you with.) I am going to work on putting a condensed GRE Boot Camp together with friends tomorrow. I can PM what we collect to you in the future if you’d like :)