In reviewing this book, I really don't even know where to begin. I guess I can start by saying I have never been quite so powerfully underwhelmed by the quality of information, organization and expertise in any technical publication I've ever read, and I've certainly read my fair share. I truly could not have been more disappointed.
As my purchase of this book would suggest, I consider myself somewhat under-informed in the area of AWS and effectively leveraging these products and their feature sets in my applications. However, it was clear almost immediately as I started reading that my cursory familiarity with the topic was more than enough to rival this author's expertise. I don't believe I'm exaggerating when say that anyone who has read the service descriptions on the AWS website, in so doing, has already gained more insights into the topic than can be found in this book.
There is absolutely no applicable technical information to be found in anywhere in the book. Instead, there are many short chapters that are poorly edited, poorly organized, poorly thought out, and poorly written. Each consists essentially of a free-form stream of thought that at most may contain some anecdotal information and a reference related to the topic. Just as often, it won't even accomplish that. Worse yet, many of these wandering diatribes are redundant and repetitive, as are the paragraphs within them. These would not make good blog posts or interoffice emails, much less meet the standard expected from a book-form professional technical resource.
The grammatical awkwardness of the book's subtitle (which I didn't pick up on before I purchased it) is only a very small taste of the tortured English used throughout the book. The form, prose, and grammar used by the author (or rather, the lack thereof) may well be the only thing powerful enough to overtake the lack of any substantive information as this book's chief flaw.
I don't like to leave all-negative reviews and I wish I could find something good to say or point out, but I think that's a lost cause in this case. I just hope I can save others the same disappointment.