Just want a good linear algebra textbook for reference. I know that there is a lot of good ones, but I am not a mathematician and I don't want anything way too abstract like Axler, Curtis, Hoffman&Kunze, etc.
However, I want the text to cover "advanced" things like inner product, Jordan forms, Bilinear forms, etc, and at least prove some of the theorems.
I am currently trying Blyth& Robertson. Though I prefer a book with examples and exercises more interesting. Also LADW is good, though I prefer paperback.
Any other suggestions?
Edit: Not that I cannot understand Axler...
Due my limited exposure to algebra and laziness, I find it way harder to see the connection between LADR and first-year linear algebra than between, say, Rudin and calculus (You just want to replace "compact set" with "closed intervals" most of the time...right?). That's why I think LADW is better for me, even if many people think it is harder than LADR.