I used these as daily Bible notes, and it was good to have an aspect of God to focus on, and then read the suggested verses (although usually I would read the whole psalm or paragraph, because only individual verses were suggested, and it's usually better to read them in context). Most of the entries are universally applicable, but some of them are a little US-centric (like when it says that a child in hospital needs an advocate to make sure they actually get treated and the insurance pays for it -a terrifying idea!)
I don't know Hebrew (I studied it for a term and can remember about two words) but I do know Greek, and a couple of the Greek terms were a bit odd. "King Eternal" was given as βασιλεῖ τῶν αἰώνων, which is what it says in the verse (1 Tim 1:17) but that means to the king eternal (or king of the ages), so out of context it should have been βασιλεὺς; and δι' οὗ τὰ πάντα was denoted as "my everything" but it means "through whom all things". There's nothing wrong with the devotional thoughts that follow, though, so I suppose it doesn't matter too much if the Greek (and perhaps the Hebrew - I don't know) is at times a bit skewiff. There's actually the number of each name/attribute (they're not all really names) in Strong's Greek/Hebrew Dictionary at the end, which earned it an extra star from me.
The book is pretty, with a padded cover and soothing artwork of nature scenes at each entry, so it would make an excellent gift. It's not heavy theology (I've filed it under "light and fluffy") but it is sound, and a good jumping off point for thinking about God.