Packed with fully explained examples, LaTeX Beginner's Guide is a hands-on introduction quickly leading a novice user to professional-quality results. If you are about to write mathematical or scientific papers, seminar handouts, or even plan to write a thesis, then this book offers you a fast-paced and practical introduction. Particularly during studying in school and university you will benefit much, as a mathematician or physicist as well as an engineer or a humanist. Everybody with high expectations who plans to write a paper or a book will be delighted by this stable software.
It is a decent textbook, a good introduction to the subject of technical typesetting. There is a caveat, I read about 25% of the book. But the problems became clear by that point. The problem is that it tries to throw too many things at you at once. It loses a star for that alone. I have intense attention to detail and the dated code examples throw up warnings highlighted by my compiler which makes for an eyesore. Final verdict: 3/5 for the 1st Edition, currently trying my luck with the 2nd edition.
It is okay, going through the basics, but not in a particularly good format. I think it tries to introduce too many packages, and should instead focus on the default commands and widely used packages.
One of the best introductory guides to LaTeX. Didactically very well organized, with practical exercises/examples. Definitely one of my top LaTex reference books.