Had a quick "look inside" on amazon, seems to cover the basics although his explanation of mashing and sparging reads very confusingly as I'm sure he says to sparge with wort not water. Recipes look ok but he doesn't tell you the alpha acids of the hops nor the target IBUs of the recipe so there's no way to tell how bitter he intends them to be other than using an average value for the hop in the recipe. Also his OG/FG and abv don't match for the Amber ale recipe.
It'll get you started fine enough but the most common / best starter book is generally Home Brew Beer by Greg Hughes, his recipes are great and his intro to brewing section is good too although I didn't need it by the time I got the book as I'd already read John Palmer's How to Brew, that one is available online at
Welcome to How to Brew - How to Brew think it's the text from his first edition and he's now onto the 4th but it's still great info, even has a section on building your own recipes which I used to make a porter when I was a newbie.
The different things I was meaning is that you could brew a pale ale, IPA, best bitter/ESB, brown ale, stout from those malts, the pale ones would need maris otter and anything from none to 500g of crystal malt then adding 100-200g of chocolate would give you a brown ale and up to 500g would be porter/stout territory. Hops would vary as well between styles.
What kinda beers were you hoping to brew when you got started? I did 3 kits then 4 small stovetop batches of all grain before I decided to go for it and get my full set-up.