This wonderful short introductory book on combinatorics sets out to do what it achieves in terms of giving a brief tour of the most famed subjects within combinatorics along with some of the most beloved results. Some these highlights include topics along the lines of enumeration problems, sequences (where the obligatory Fibonacci sequence pops in), binomial coefficients, multinomials, graph theory, magic squares and in the end we finally reach integer partitions for a terse discussion.
Surprisingly I assume for some, I am glad that it challenges the reader (who may either be familiar or not with mathematics) with a fair number of proofs as well as setting forth a writing style which leans heavily (although not pedantically) on mathematical notation. I understand that for some who don't carry an interest in mathematics that it may be at times hard to follow, but in my opinion it is worth the struggle as it will both give you a glimpse into the writing style of ordinary mathematical textbooks as well as give you a stronger mathematical exposure which should be very helpful to transfer to other popular math books that are not meant as university text books.
I should mention here that I used the same authors textbook on graph theory in university for a course on the subject which turns out to be also highly readable and in commonality with this book covers a lot of territory in few pages. My only complaint with this book is that it ends rather abruptly not fully having explained why it is that integer partitions are the highlight of the book except for mentioning that they do not behave in in a predictable manner. One would have done well to expand upon the concept of a generating function here and to observe the usefulness of partitions in this setting or to mention their applicability in computer science in relation to algorithms for example.
Note: I don't like the star rating and as such I only rate books based upon one star or five stars corresponding to the in my opinion preferable rating system of thumbs up/down. This later rating system increases in my humble opinion the degree to which the reader is likely to engage with a review instead of merely glancing at the number of stars of a given book.)