Either I had a cheap edition, or the original book is type-set in a way that is not adequate to the page size. The text is small. I wouldn't mind if it were a random fiction book, but this one is about design, and it contains a section about typography as well. Or is it on purpose, to troll the reader or something?
The book contains a lot of wisdom that fits the definition of what is very likely to learn in a design school. It's the design industry's equivalent of street smarts, and the language and tone the author uses in the book, it looks, was picked to match.
Just be aware, before committing to reading this book, that the knowledge it contains is quite general and applies to design as a profession (or should I say vocation?) in general. For example, if you are in digital product design, at first, the content of the book will seem irrelevant, but at some point it will probably click together.
Even though the book is organized as a series of short, self-contained notes, I found it overall more aspirational than practical. It's decades of experience, compressed just a bit over 200 pages, not a cookbook where you pick a recipe and go apply on the job that same day. It requires a lot of processing.