I'm a math student. I work with both Spivak's and Apostol´s calculus books. There is a solutions manual for Spivak and there is a blog for Apostol Vol I. However, I haven't been able to find any solutions manual for Vol II. Does anybody know where you can get it or if it doesn't exist?
Thanks.
Since I think that this answers the question (though it is perhaps not the answer that was desired), and since it doesn't fit in a comment anyway, I am going to provide it as an answer.
When another MSE user asked for a solutions manual to Lee's Introduction to Smooth Manifolds, Lee himself responded with
I think that this applies here as much as it did there.
In response to the counter-arugment "What about people who are self-studying, or for whom mathematics is just a hobby?", I think that the advice is even more relevant. If you are studying a subject for a class, you are rewarded and penalized for your work, hence there is a very strong incentive to get it done correctly under the pressure of a deadline. The hobbiest or self-studier is under no such pressure, and has the time to be "stuck" on difficult problems. There is no penalty for late work.
Moreover, if one is taking a class, then there is a ready-made structure for expanding upon and providing context for solutions to problems. This structure is not provided by a solutions manual, but can be found through conversation (e.g. on MSE). Such conversation is going to help one to understand the errors in their thinking or underlying assumptions much more readily than a solutions manual.
With regard to "checking one's work," I think it is worth pointing out that a solutions manual may not actually be all that useful. If you are really uncertain as to whether or not your proof is sound, a solutions manual may not help all that much, because the approach in the manual may be different from the approach of a given student. Again, the student is going to benefit more from conversation and interaction than from a solution written from a particular point of view at a particular point in time.