>>13242681Redox titrations aren't hard, you certainly don't need a whole book on it.
Harris - Quantitative Chemical Analysis probably has a chapter on it or something.
Basically, you just titrate an oxidizing agent into something that can be reduced and then measure the change in oxidation state. It would be fairly easy to measure the change using an indicator for your system.
Titrations are not difficult. They're all the same. You add a known quantity of one half of your reaction to an unknown concentration and use an indicator to determine your endpoint where your concentrations or added and unknown should be equal (in the case of redox there may be like a 2:3 ratio or something depending on the number of electrons involved).