My pet alternative title for this book is 'EECS for Poets'. That is because the author explains all of the words and concepts explicitly and in detail from the most basic starting point. I had studied the subject before and there were terms that I truly did not know the real definition of because other books just start using the words and then piling concepts on them. With this book I finally understood what was truly going on.
As for the projects, I browsed and read through them but found Lowe's books in the Electronics for Dummies series to be a better companion as a lab book to be used in conjunction with a kit like the Radio Shack 300(?) Electronics Experiments.
Yes, the author does digress into opinionated rants about cable companies, about how crystals have no medical benefits, and how HDTV will never catch on. The book also contains historical chapters about the theory and workings of earlier devices such as 8-track tapes, vacuum tubes, cassette tapes, black and white television, and record players. Although the title says "electronics theory" this book actually contains the background from electrons to electronic components like resistors, transistors (FET, MOSFET), all the way to computers, audio, video, signal processing and broadcasting systems. When I first saw this book and read the table of contents, I marveled at how much I would know if I just finished it. I allowed that excitement to continue and it all came true.