Part of the McGraw-Hill Core Concepts Series, Modern Digital Electronics is an ideal textbook for a course on digital electronics at the undergraduate level. The text introduces digital systems and techniques through a bottom-up approach that allows users to start out with the basics of integrated circuits/circuit design and delve into topics such as digital design, flip flops, A/D and D/A. The book then moves on to explore elements of complex digital circuits with material like FPGAs, PLDs, PLAs, and more. Rich pedagogical features include review questions with answers, a glossary of key terms, a large number of solved examples, and numerous practice problems. This is a concise, less expensive alternative to other digital logic designs. This series is edited by Dick Dorf.
Logic circuits basics as well as some advanced material around Logic Design is represented in a succinct manner. I found it a very dry book for what I think is a very interesting subject. However it does put in all the required information one would need to understand this subject (and more importantly, pass the exam :))
Not sure if it is dated now, but I am sure that better reference books and material are accessible now which was not the case when I went through this course around 15 years ago.
My only advice to the students who would be reading this book today, in case this book feels too dry do check other books or study material online. Logic circuits is an interesting as well as a fundamental subject of computer engineering and it is best not to judge the subject based on just one book.