Sorry, yes, Lindeburg. I had the name wrong. (Isn't Lindemann a Belgian lambic brewer?) Lindeburg book is vital.
Anyway, since the general exam in the morning now covers everything, you can no longer afford to be a complete specialist. You need at least a passing familiarity with all fields. I found that the CD-ROM from SmartPros did a good job of reminding me what I had forgotten since undergraduate days. It's pretty expensive but maybe your employer will buy it for you. I will say that their structural module is inadequate but it did a good review of everything else, well in line with the level of question appearing on the exam. I did that just the week before the exam and so I still remembered it all pretty well when I went in. (Not that I recommend that strategy for everyone.)
has lots of decent study materials.
I went through the NCEES sample exam (which isn't quite realistic because it has questions in it that depend on answers to previous questions), looking at all 5 afternoon options, and it seemed to me that with a couple of undergraduate classes in the relevant field, one could easily pass the Geotech, Transportation, Hydraulics, and Environmental versions of the Civil exam. The structural afternoon questions, on the other hand, required a much deeper understanding, not to mention pretty good application of various codes, many of which you might not currently be working with. You need to know masonry, wood, steel for both buildings and bridges, and concrete for both buildings and bridges--again, there is no more picking and choosing of questions. For the afternoon structural component alone you'll have to get to know some unfamiliar references pretty well.
Continuing along the tangent, it seems to me that the people writing the structural afternoon questions just weren't on the same page as the other people. It's a completely different level of difficulty--and my educational background is all structural. The sad part is that the fact that one took that version of the test isn't reflected anywhere; if you want to be called a Structural Engineer you're still going to have to go take the Structural rather than Civil exam.
Hg