check!
Sort of the right idea but not quite. Think about it this way:
If you look at your alcohol, you break off each side chain (so you'd break off a methyl group from the left, and a propyl group from the right). This is called disconnection.
In order to add these groups, your compound needs to be a carbonyl.
So if we take the starting compound, and break off the methyl group, we see that in order to form it, we need an aldehyde that is of the structure CH
3CH
2CH
2CHO. We can then add CH
3MgBr to it.
Well, now how did we make CH
3CH
2CH
2CHO? That is an aldehyde, and we discussed that we can make those from primary alcohols by oxidation (although, we have yet to identify the oxidation that will stop at an aldehyde). So we can say that the CH
3CH
2CH
2CHO came from CH
3CH
2CH
2CH
2OH.
Ok, awesome! Now, where did CH
3CH
2CH
2CH
2OH come from. Well, how did we say we make primary alcohols? Those came from formaldehyde and a grignard reagent. So, if we break off the other side chain, we can see our initial starting products were CH
2O and CH
3CH
2CH
2MgBr.
Can you draw that process out? The last thing you need to identify is the type of oxidation that will go from a primary alcohol to an aldehyde, and the answer is in the wikipedia link I gave you above.
Sorry I can't draw this, but my chem draw software isn't installed yet. Maybe Azmanam will see this and drop by with a pretty colored picture for us