Occasionally some good advice. He is correct that one doesn't need to spend hours in the gym five days a week to get good results. He's also right that focusing on the heavy, multi-muscle group exercises stimulates real gains better than anything else.
Occasionally there were some good anecdotes about Reg Park. His programs for sets and reps, such as they were, were generally correct (though this ultimately differs from lifter to lifter).
Nonetheless, there were some huge problems with the book.
1) I have read maybe two other books in my life that have a more hideous and painful writing style. I could only read short sections at a time because it was so bad. I am not judging the book because it is simply a collection of magazine articles. That is perfectly acceptable. I am judging the book because it reads like a series of 6th grade level conversations (which is really what each chapter is--dialogues) with no context whatsoever.
2) The font was microscopic. I've seen dictionaries with bigger print.
3) His get-big drink will probably put you in the hospital. If you put raw eggs in your drink, you deserve what's going to happen to you (e.g., spending the next two weeks on the toilet). Simple whey protein may not give you the gains that he promises his "big" drink will, but it will help you gain weight and you won't end up financing your doctor's new Mercedes either.