I'm doing the same basically, and I do not recommend Morris Kline, because it develops a convoluted series of deductions which you are somehow to intuit and does not provide exhaustive examples. When you go to the problems you have to scribble like Eistein sometimes, which is no good. They are geometric, and not formulaic. So while you have a geometric concept in mind, it is easily forgotten because you have to know how to construct the derivations without help sometimes. Plus, sometimes the problems have variations. The solution manual is only online and you have to pirate iirc. It's free though.
But if you do get it, scribble like a mad physicist and you might be surprised to see you get consistent results.
I did like Howard Anton's book though, I should go rent from the library.
But I just bought Stewarts so I'll go with that.