Therefore: the layout is very dense, poorly ventilated, the chapters chaining without reference to the following page. This does not facilitate the reading.
Added to this is in my view a choice of organization of the work which that information may be too fragmented, dispersed according to sort key that do not have obvious relevance in.
The most telling example of this organization is that the quests are not always presented in relation to their geographical location (eg in a city or a specific place to which they are attached) but in relation to their subject.
To take a concrete example, the quest The conspiracy of perjurers does not appear in the section describing Morthal, which is nevertheless the city where the quest takes place exclusively.
Why not, but at least there is a reference to the corresponding pages in this quest in the city, even giving the impression of a certain redundancy.
To sum up: to find some side quests may be problematic, browsing in the book being more thematic (main quest Temple quest Brotherhood quest, dungeon quest etc ...) that chronological or geographical.
I do not deny the deduction logic but it requires a big adjustment period, especially for players who tend to go with the adventure without rigorous and methodical exploration plan.
Finally, although there are also some shells (untranslated words or titles) but obviously we are dealing with a very good guide, which aims to complete well to finish the game in the most comprehensive manner possible.
This is not nothing, considering that Skyrim offers dozens or even hundreds of hours of play.
We conclude by saying that while there are good solutions online, this guide seems a good investment regardless of your player profile: a book will always be more practical and above all searchable offline.
Anyway the kilo, it really is worth its weight info!